1000 pounds. Tammy of the sisters moves in with her brother Amanda Fight
1000 pounds. sisters‘ Tammy Slaton He has supposedly moved in with his brother. Chris Combs after his sister Amanda Halterman He kicked her out of the rental house where she previously lived.
“[Tammy] I had to move in with his brother Chris because he lost his house,” a friend told him. The US Sunadding that Tammy and Amanda “just don’t get along at all.”
“They fight worse than cats and dogs,” the friend claimed of the sisters, adding that the sisters have had multiple heated arguments in recent months, including one at the funeral of Tammy’s late husband, Caleb Willingham.
The publication reported that the move occurred in November when Tammy left the $76,000 home Amanda owns in Sturgis, Kentucky. She didn’t have to go far since Chris’s house is 38 miles from where she used to live.
Tammy previously lived with her sister. Amy Halterman in a Dixon, Kentucky duplex until Amy bought a new home for her family, including her now-estranged husband. Michael Halterman and his sons, Gage and Glenn. He bought the house in Morganfield, Kentucky, in 2021 for $37,000.
The TLC star spent 14 months in a weight-loss rehab center in Ohio and was released in February 2023. However, during that time, burglars broke into Tammy’s duplex in Dixon, Kentucky, in May 2022. to steal your furniture. The thieves kicked in the back door of the house and took Tammy’s washer and dryer, refrigerator, sinks, water heater, and a dresser containing all of his clothes.
The consequences were shown in the February 7 episode of 1000-Lb. Sisters and the damage was discovered after Amanda and Tammy’s other sister, Misty Slaton, stopped by to collect some of her belongings.
Tammy decided not to return home after leaving rehab because she was too traumatized by the robbery.
The siblings haven’t had it easy in life, as Amanda shared what it was like growing up on June 7th. tiktok video. One fan asked: “I get the impression that you all had a difficult upbringing. Can you touch that?
“We grew up very poor. Our mother was a single mother with five children and our grandmother was the one who stayed at home with us and she raised us,” Amanda said. “My uncle Kevin played a huge role in our upbringing.”
When asked about her financial situation, she responded: “We didn’t have a urinal to urinate in or a window to throw it out. That’s all I’m going to say about it.”
“I don’t want anyone to feel sorry for me and my brothers,” he continued. “That’s how we all are. We just want to be seen for who we are as individuals and know that we are good human beings. We are good people and have done everything we can to raise our children well.