Courtesy of the NYPost.com
About a year ago, Mary Richardson Kennedy killed herself. The official Kennedy spin was that she had a long history of depression and other mental challenges which finally became too much for her to handle.
Her husband, Robert Kennedy Jr., was portrayed as the faithful, loving husband, who did everything he could to make her life livable.
On Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013, that lie came apart with the NY Post's publication of passages from Kennedy's 2001 personal diary, which his wife had found about a year before her death.
When you read the story below, you'll quickly understand how his slutty lifestyle would push any self-respecting woman over the edge, let alone one who already was suffering from her own demons.
The truth is that no one knows how many of his annual diaries she found. She may have known about them year-by-year, or maybe she found them all at once.
Given the sleazy life Robert Kennedy Jr. led, and documented, it's easy to imagine that either way, knowing what Kennedy wrote about himself, she no doubt saw herself as an inadequate human being, used as furniture by the slimy Kennedy.
Following this post today, we will also post Part 2 of this revelation about Kennedy. In it he trashes major American politicians of that era, many who are still in the limelight today.
And as you read this story, keep in mind this is the guy who ordered the US military to stand down from rescuing the Americans in Benghazi.
What a guy - a true Kennedy.
Kenneth
+++++++++++++++++++++++
To get Mary's family's take on Kennedy, follow this link:
http://dedetillmanblogs.wordpress.com/2012/06/11/mary-kennedys-family-slams-robert-f-kennedy-jr-s-shocking-claims/
+++++++++++++++++++++++
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. grappled with what he called his biggest defect
— “my lust demons” — while keeping a scorecard of more than two dozen
conquests, according to his secret diary.
The thick, red journal was found in their home by his wife, Mary
Richardson Kennedy, who, distraught over their impending divorce and
Kennedy’s serial philandering, committed suicide last year.
A copy of the 398 pages, reviewed by The Post, details RFK Jr.’s
daily activities, speeches, political activism and the lives of his six
children in the year 2001. But they also record the names of women —
with numbers from 1 to 10 next to each entry.
The codes corresponded to sexual acts, with 10 meaning intercourse,
Mary told a confidant. There are 37 women named in the ledger, 16 of
whom get 10s.
On Nov. 13, 2001, RFK Jr. records a triple play. The separate
encounters — coded 10, 3 and 2 — occur the same day he attended a
black-tie fund-raiser at the Waldorf-Astoria for Christopher Reeve’s
charity, where he sat next to the paralyzed “Superman” star, magician
David Blaine and comic Richard Belzer.
It was a hectic month for Kennedy, who traveled to Toronto,
Louisiana and Washington, DC — and listed at least one woman’s name on
22 different dates, including 13 consecutive days.
Most women are identified only by first name in the ledger. They
include a lawyer, an environmental activist, a doctor and at least one
woman married to a famous actor.
A Post reporter who questioned Kennedy Friday about the diary was first met with six seconds of stunned silence.
“I don’t think there is any way you could have a diary or journal of
mine from 2001,” Kennedy then said. “I don’t have any comment on it. I
have no diary from 2001.”
The diary is laced with Kennedy’s Catholic guilt over his
infidelities, which follow the same pattern of affairs pursued by his
uncles, John F. Kennedy and Ted Kennedy, as well as his own father.
On days without a woman’s name, Kennedy would often write “victory.”
This meant he’d triumphantly resisted sexual temptation, according to a
source close to Richardson.
“Despite the terrible things happening in the world, my life is . . .
great,” he wrote on Nov. 5, 2001.
“So I’ve been looking for ways to
screw it up. I’m like Adam and live in Eden, and I can have everything
but the fruit. But the fruit is all I want.”
The 59-year-old son of the assassinated US senator was so tortured by
his desire that spending a month in jail in Puerto Rico was a welcome
respite.
“I’m so content here,” he writes during his July 2001 incarceration
for taking part in protests of the US Navy’s bombing exercises in
Vieques. “I have to say it. There’s no women. I’m happy!
Everybody here
seems happy. It’s not misogyny. It’s the opposite! I love them too
much.”
Yet Kennedy adds, “I love my wife and I tell it to her every day, and I never tire of it and write her tender letters.”
Nine years later, Kennedy and his wife separated when he filed for
divorce. And on May 16, 2012, Richardson, 52, committed suicide by
hanging herself in an outbuilding on the couple’s Bedford estate.
Kennedy’s cheating had become a huge issue in the marriage.
Richardson told a friend that her husband noted the names of his
romantic conquests on pages in the back of his journal under the
preprinted heading “cash accounts.”
The journal begins with word that Richardson is pregnant with the couple’s fourth child.
The couple had known each other since Richardson was 14 and a
boarding-school roommate of
Kennedy’s younger sister, Kerry. They
married in 1994, weeks after Kennedy divorced his first wife, Emily
Black, with whom he had two children.
Richardson was pregnant with their first child, Conor, when they
married. They moved into the 1920 clapboard house in Westchester County.
Kennedy, an environmental lawyer and board president of the nonprofit
Waterkeeper Alliance, spent much of his time traveling to give
speeches, according to his diary.
He had recently been weighing a possible Senate run for New York,
before Hillary Rodham Clinton
stepped into the race. Richardson stayed
home with the children.
The beautiful brunette struggled with depression and alcoholism. Her husband described her at her funeral as “fighting demons.”
The couple was not yet divorced when she died and were bitterly
arguing over issues involving custody and finances. Kennedy had
temporary custody of the four children and was dating actress Cheryl
Hines.
A sealed document in which Kennedy portrayed his wife as an abusive
alcoholic who beat him up and threatened suicide in front of the
children was leaked to the press.
Kennedy said in the affidavit that by 2001 he had “lost hope” in his
marriage and was “committing numerous infidelities to keep my sanity,”
according to a published report.
But his journal paints a different picture. He barely mentions his
wife’s emotional problems, making just a passing reference to her
struggles with depression.
When he is jailed in Puerto Rico, he writes on July 8 that “I finally
spoke to my wonderful wife and that was a joy. She is very strong and
cheerful.”
The couple’s son, Aiden, was born just days later. He writes: “I’m so
proud of my Mary. She has become the woman I fell in love with —
through hard work. She has overcome her fears, enshrined her faith,
abandoned self-pity and blame and immersed herself in gratitude and God
gave her a baby . . . a beautiful and serene and happy soul. I am so
happy. I couldn’t be happier or more grateful for the life and the wife
God has given me.”
He also found time to muse on his own weakness.
“After daddy died I struggled to be a grown-up . . . I felt he was
watching me from heaven. Every time I was afflicted with sexual
thoughts, I felt a failure. I hated myself. I began to lie — to make up a
character who was the hero and leader that I wished I was,” he writes
on July 25.
Kennedy writes near the end of his jail sentence that he has a
“three-point plan” for “fixing my greatest defect . . . my lust demons.”
He doesn’t write down the plan, leaving the subsequent days of the
diary blank.
An entry five days later reads “Drove to Cape with Mary and all the
kids.” By mid-August, he again records women’s names in the back of his
journal.
Kennedy holds back on any detailed description of his conquests and
bizarrely portrays himself as a kind of victim. He uses the word
“mugged” as shorthand for being seduced.
“I narrowly escaped being mugged by a double team of [two women]. It
was tempting but I prayed and God gave me the strength to say no,” he
writes on Feb. 6. A few days later, on Valentine’s Day, he gives his
pregnant wife orchids, he notes.
On May 21, he writes about hosting dinner for Leonardo DiCaprio,
driving the actor to the city and then meeting someone else in
Manhattan. He notes he “got mugged on my way home,” recording a 10 with
the name of a woman next to it.
“I’ve got to do better,” he adds.
In another entry, he tells himself to “avoid the company of women.
You have not the strength to resist their charms” and to “be humble like
a monk. Keep your hands to yourself. Avert your eyes.”
In summer 2001, Kennedy writes that “I have been given everything
that I coveted — a beautiful wife and kids and loving family, wealth,
education, good health and a job I love yet always on the lookout for
something I can’t have. I want it all,” he writes. “No matter how much I
have — I want more.”
No comments:
Post a Comment