Country music legend Loretta Lynn's health has been on the minds of many of her fans. Get the latest on the star's status here!
Country music icon Loretta Lynn‘s frisky new puppy may have caused the star’s most recent health setback, a broken hip.
“She has a new puppy — we don’t really know if she was chasing after the puppy or what, but she slid and fractured her hip. We blame the puppy!” Loretta’s daughter Patsy recently explained to PEOPLE with a chuckle. “Though the puppy brings smiles so there’s that.”
Fortunately, the 85-year-old singer-songwriter is in good spirits and is currently in rehab to recover from her fall. In May 2017, the star suffered a stroke and has been busy healing from that episode.
“She said she’s just mad about being back to laying up watching TV! Hopefully, she will recover quickly. She’s strong — it’s amazing she’s able to go through all she’s been through. She had a stroke in May and has been having band rehearsals and getting around great by herself; she’s recording, she’s finishing up another album. That’s what she’s been focusing on. She’s nonstop but she’s always been that way — it’s what keeps her going.”
Hopefully the Kentucky native will be back on her feet and performing again in no time! We wish her the best!
Check out this vintage clip of Loretta Lynn performing her hit song “Coal Miner’s Daughter” live below!
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Well, I was born a coal miner’s daughter
In a cabin, on a hill in Butcher Holler
We were poor but we had love,
That’s the one thing that daddy made sure of
He’d shovel coal to make a poor man’s dollar
My daddy worked all night in the Van Lear coal mines
All day long in the field a hoin’ corn
Mommy rocked the babies at night
And read the Bible by the coal oil light
And ever’ thing would start all over come break of morn
Daddy loved and raised eight kids on a miner’s pay
Mommy scrubbed our clothes on a washboard ever’ day
Why I’ve seen her fingers bleed
To complain, there was no need
She’d smile in mommy’s understanding way
In the summertime we didn’t have shoes to wear
But in the wintertime we’d all get a brand new pair
From a mail order catalog
Money made from selling a hog
Daddy always managed to get the money somewhere
Yeah, I’m proud to be a coal miner’s daughter
I remember well, the well where I drew water
The work we done was hard
At night we’d sleep ’cause we were tired
I never thought of ever leaving Butcher Holler
Well a lot of things have changed since a way back then
And it’s so good to be back home again
Not much left but the floor, nothing lives here anymore
Except the memory of a coal miner’s daughter
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