Read The Women of Duck Commander Online

Authors: Kay Robertson,Jessica Robertson

The Women of Duck Commander (4 page)

When people see us around the table at the end of each
Duck Dynasty
episode, they get a good glimpse into who we are because they can tell we are people of faith. But they do not get a complete picture of what makes our family work, and that is one reason we wrote this book.

We all came into the Robertson family the same way: we fell in love with a Robertson man and believed we could build a good life with him, a life based on faith and family. Of course, we also knew we might spend a good bit of time apart from him during duck season! We all value different aspects of the family and appreciate
being part of this remarkable group for different reasons, but we all agree that our family is amazing and wonderful.

Miss Kay:
I L
OVED
T
HEM
B
EFORE
I K
NEW
T
HEM

For as long as I can remember, all I really wanted to do with my life was be the best wife and mother I could possibly be. As my boys began to grow up, I realized I also wanted to be the best mother-in-law I could be. Long before the boys met the women they eventually married, I began to pray for those girls. I prayed for them for years! I asked the Lord to give the boys godly wives who would love Him first and love them second. I don’t believe any of my daughters-in-law ended up in the family by happenstance; God sent each one and each one is perfect for the Robertson man she married.

I believe the two most important decisions and vows we make are: first, to make Jesus Christ the Lord of our lives, and second, to choose godly mates and make lifelong commitments to them. I always knew the wives my sons chose would determine how their faith would grow and develop, and I prayed they would marry women who would help and encourage them spiritually. I am happy and thankful to say God has answered those prayers.

Before my boys started dating, I made up my mind that I would love their wives. I never was one of those women who thought no young lady could be good enough for my son, and I never wanted
to be a mother-in-law who competed with a daughter-in-law. I always had a heart to be kind and loving to whomever my sons chose, to be supportive of them and to embrace each one like my own daughter.

Lisa, Missy, Korie, and Jessica all know they can come to me for anything. If they have a fuss with their husbands, they know I will not automatically side with my boys. I will judge a situation according to what is right and wrong, based on what God says in His Word. I am not the kind of person who defends bad behavior just because one of my sons does it. If someone does something wrong, even if it’s one of the boys, I will call it what it is!

I am glad to have such close relationships with my daughters-in-law and to be part of a great family of faith with them. Each one has a different personality and different ways of doing things. But each one is special to me and I love them all dearly!

Jessica:
L
ET’S
G
ET ONE
T
HING
S
TRAIGHT

Somehow, because of
Duck Dynasty
, people often brand us Robertson wives as “gold diggers.” That might be offensive to us if we were thin-skinned or if it were true. But it is not. In fact, it’s
so
not true that we always get a good laugh when we hear the latest rumor about how we married our husbands because of their fortunes. People know Miss Kay didn’t marry Phil for his money, and they don’t necessarily see Lisa as a gold digger because they know Alan worked for years as a pastor before joining Duck Commander. But Korie, Missy, and me—people seem to think we plotted and schemed to
capture wealthy, long-haired hunters, determined to marry them for their riches. Let me set the record straight.

When Missy married Jase, hardly anyone outside the hunting world had ever heard of him. Missy worked full-time in an administrative role at a local medical clinic to help support the two of them. She never dreamed he would one day become duck call royalty!

Korie and Willie married while they were in college and they laugh now about having to go to a friend’s house to do their laundry. They were on such a tight budget that their favorite mealtime splurge was chicken strips and macaroni and cheese out of a box. Willie has always been an industrious person and a hard worker. All of his life, he has been happy to pick up odd jobs for extra money, but in the early years of his and Korie’s marriage, they were both in college and money was tight. When their children were young, Korie worked in a paid position as children’s minister at our church. She also used her skills as a fine artist to paint detailed pictures on duck calls and sold them at hunting shows.

When I married Jep and for several years afterward, I had numerous jobs, including making hand-sewn heirloom dresses and smocked children’s clothes to sell to boutiques, working as a Realtor, and being a sales representative for a clothing company. Though Jep has always been the head of our home and the leader of our family, I have always tried to contribute financially as best I could. When we first got married, several years before
Duck Dynasty
started, we lived in a little trailer and could barely make ends meet. We just wanted to be able to pay our bills, buy groceries, and put gas in our cars.

I can say with complete confidence that each one of us wives married her husband because she loved and respected him; we knew
they were men we could honor and trust. All of us value and appreciate these men because of who they are on the inside, not because they are now TV stars. We all married them when they had very little, and we were happy. We struggled financially, just as many other couples do—and we were happy. Now God has blessed us with more resources than we have ever had, and we’re still happy. But I can assure you that all of us would rather have strong, solid marriages with godly men than have all the riches this world could offer. And you can take
that
to the bank!

2

THE CHEERLEADER AND THE QUARTERBACK

Miss Kay

I cannot remember a time in my life when I did not want to grow up, get married, and raise a family. I can remember a couple of times when I wanted to be an airline stewardess or a teacher, but those did not last very long. Being a wife and mother was always my dream, and it was never far from my mind. As I mentioned earlier, I not only wanted to be a wife and mother, I wanted to be
the best
wife and mother on earth. I believed that if I could do that, I would have a happy family and a great life.

As a child, the best role models I had were my grandparents. I loved my mom and dad, too, but my mother did some strange things I later found out were due to alcohol use, and my father, whom I adored, died when I was only fourteen years old. Before he passed away, my parents ran the local store in our community, a
business that was in our family for seventy-five years. Taking care of the store took most of their time, so I spent a lot of time either at the store visiting with customers or with my grandparents.

A P
OWERFUL
I
NFLUENCE

My grandmother, whom I called Nannie, loved to tell me stories from the old days and had a powerful influence on me. She married at the age of fifteen. She went to school for a short time before she had to quit but learned a lot about life because she survived some very hard times. She was also a woman of wisdom, because she was a woman of great faith, and faith and wisdom usually go together. She was a great cook and spent a lot of time working in the kitchen, like many women of her generation—before microwaves and the other gadgets that make cooking easy these days. She had a big, full garden and taught me all about gardening. At her house I had the best time picking vegetables, shelling peas, and shucking corn with her in preparation for a meal. She seemed to be cooking all the time and taught me to cook at a young age. One of my very favorite ways to spend time with Nannie was to stay right beside her and cook with her. We developed a very strong bond in the kitchen together, whether I was helping her cook her daily meals for the workers at my parents’ store or helping her prepare smaller meals for our family. I definitely got my now-famous kitchen abilities from my grandmother, and Phil says he will always love her for that!

One of my favorite things to do when I was young was to spend my evenings after supper sitting and talking with Nannie in the big
swing that sat in her yard. We spent hours and hours just swaying back and forth, talking about all kinds of things and waving to every car that drove by. I have wonderful memories of those times.

I also remember watching Nannie and my grandfather together. In one room of their house were two maple rocking chairs with a gas heater between them, and they sat in those chairs every day as Nannie read the Bible to my grandfather. In their bedroom were two double beds with a nightstand between them. When I spent the night with my grandparents, I slept with Nannie while my grandfather slept in the other bed, which I guess he did every night. Even though they did not sleep in the same bed, they both reached out and held hands across the nightstand, and I always thought that was so sweet. When we woke up the next morning, Nannie never failed to take my grandfather a cup of coffee, very early. That daily act of kindness touched me and I never forgot it. My grandmother had a true servant’s heart, and she deeply loved her husband.

Because my grandmother was such an important part of my life and such a good example to me, her words carried a lot of weight. We never talked about anything intimate when it came to boys or men because people simply did not do that in her day, but she always told me that marriage is “one man, one wife—for life.” I believed that as a child, and I still believe it today. I knew from a very young age that when I met the man I wanted to marry, I would stick with him!

A P
ERFECT
M
ATCH

Phil says he and I have always been a perfect match. We started going together when I was in the ninth grade and he was in the tenth grade. He was the star quarterback of our high school football team, and I was a cheerleader. I was so happy to be dating him once we got together! We took a little break when hunting season started just after Christmas that year because Phil wanted to spend his free time hunting and decided he did not have time for a girlfriend. But then my dad died suddenly and Phil came to his funeral. I think he was trying to send the message that he cared about me—and it worked. I was glad he showed up, even though we did not have a chance to talk.

My dad had been my rock and my protector. I always felt safe with him and wanted to marry someone with qualities similar to his. I knew Phil was the same type of strong, protective person my dad was, so in many ways Phil became like a replacement for my dad. He gave me back some of what I lost when my dad passed away. In addition, he was everything I wanted in a man. I had always wanted someone outdoorsy and someone who was strong and courageous. That was Phil!

A few weeks after my dad died, Phil asked me out and, of course, I went. We have basically been together ever since. My mother also started dating not too long after my dad passed away, so within several months of his death, she and I were both dating at the same time. That was not always good. I needed her help and guidance because I had not been in a relationship with a guy before, but she was not available. Plus, she was not in favor of my dating Phil
because his family did not have much money. That was a lot more important to her than it was to me. During that time, I spent less time at home with my mother and more time at the Robertsons’ house, surrounded by a happy, loving family.

As Phil and I grew closer, we faced the same temptations most young people deal with when they are in love. I did not know how to handle those feelings. My mother was not available to talk to and I felt I could not mention something like sex to my grandmother. I had always been a “good” girl. I was not the slightest bit adventurous as a child. I obeyed and I behaved. As a teenager I had to figure out a lot of things for myself. I was on my own when it came to knowing what to do about a physical relationship with Phil.

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