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KRIS KRISTOFFERSON WROTE SOME OF THE GREATEST SONGS IN COUNTRY HISTORY — THEN FORGOT THEM ALL. DOCTORS SAID IT WAS ALZHEIMER’S. THEY WERE WRONG. By his late 70s, Kris Kristofferson couldn’t remember what he was doing from one moment to the next.

The man who wrote “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down,” and “Help Me Make It Through the Night” was losing his own words. Doctors told him it was Alzheimer’s. They put him on medications for years. He kept getting worse.

Then his wife Lisa pushed for one more test. In 2016, the answer came back: Lyme disease — not Alzheimer’s. He’d been taking drugs for a disease he never had. After three weeks of the right treatment, everything changed.

His friend Chris Gantry said it was “like Lazarus coming out of the grave.” Kristofferson went back on tour. He even showed up at Willie Nelson’s 90th birthday concert in 2023 and sang one more time. He died peacefully in Maui on September 28, 2024.

He was 88. He once wrote a song about his own fading memory: “I see an empty chair. Someone was sitting there. I’ve got a feeling it was me.” So what happens when the man who gave Nashville its most beautiful words can no longer remember writing them — and what did his wife see that every doctor missed?

 

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