
Without Bonnie Owens, Merle Haggard Might Have Never Released ‘Mama Tried’ or ‘Today I Started Loving You Again’
Merle Haggard could turn hard living into poetry, but without Bonnie Owens, some of his most timeless words might have never made it past a passing thought.
They met in 1961, when Haggard was fresh off a divorce and Bonnie was already a rising star in California country circles. By 1965, they were married, the same year Bonnie won the Academy of Country Music’s Female Vocalist of the Year. At a time when her own career was climbing, she chose to step back, pour her energy into their growing family, and quietly become the creative engine behind some of Haggard’s biggest hits.
Haggard never tried to hide it. During a 2012 talk at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, he painted the picture plainly. “I got into a heated period where I was writing pretty good. It was right after she and I had got married. If I even indicated that I was going to write, well, she was there with a pad and a pen. She didn’t miss anything. There wouldn’t have been no ‘Mama Tried’ or ‘Working Man Blues’ if it wouldn’t have been for her. She took the words down at the right time.”
That burst of songwriting fire in the late 1960s led to six BMI Awards in one year. Haggard said each song had Bonnie’s fingerprints on it, right down to “Today I Started Loving You Again.” That one was sparked in the middle of a tour break, when Haggard told her, “I finally have time to love you again.” Bonnie didn’t miss a beat and replied, “What an idea for a song.” By the time she came back from grabbing him some food, the song was written. Haggard gave her a large share of the publishing rights, a gesture that said more than any love song could.
Their marriage lasted 13 years, ending in 1978, but their respect for each other never dimmed. They kept touring together, and their friendship outlasted their marriage. By the early 2000s, Bonnie’s health was failing. In 2006, she entered hospice care for Alzheimer’s disease.
Haggard recalled his last visit with her, years later, with a voice that still trembled at the memory. She pulled him aside from a group of visitors and took him to her room. On the wall above her bed was a large photo of the two of them from decades earlier. “She looked at me, and she said, ‘He’s my favorite.’ She didn’t identify me with that picture,” Haggard said. The disease had stolen faces and memories, but the affection in her voice was still there.
It’s a bittersweet ending to a story that was never just about romance. It was about collaboration, trust, and the kind of love that pushes someone else’s dreams forward even when your own could be burning bright.
Without Bonnie Owens, “Mama Tried” might never have been scribbled down in time. “Today I Started Loving You Again” might have stayed just an offhand comment on a tour bus. “Working Man Blues” might have been lost in the shuffle.
But because she was there with that pad and pen, ready to catch lightning when it struck, those songs now live forever. And so does the bond between two people who made sure the music came first, even when the marriage did not last.