Watch: Amy Grant Had to Re-Learn How to Sing After Gruesome Bike Wreck (Exclusive)
Amy Grant isn’t taking every heartbeat for granted.
The “Baby Baby” singer credited her husband of 26 years Vince Gill for helping her gain a new perspective on life after suffering a traumatic brain injury from a 2022 biking accident that left her with memory loss.
Recalling how the “world was very quiet” amid her challenging recovery, Amy shared on the April 30 episode of NPR’s Wild Card with Rachel Martin, “I just remember saying to Vince, ‘What if this is all I get back? What if this is it?'”
“Because, to me, it’s like the world is in a conversation, and I am down the hall and in a back bedroom,” the 65-year-old continued, explaining how she often felt like she was “three steps behind” from other people. “This is like my response time.”
However, Vince—with whom she shares 25-year-old daughter Corrina Grant Gill—simply replied, “‘Amy, life happens to every one of us every day. A virtuoso musician could have a stroke and never be able to pick up their instrument again. All you do is you just take the hand you’re dealt that day and live the life that you get.'”
That’s why Amy began making music again in 2023 after a yearslong hiatus. In fact, she wasn’t afraid to seek help whenever she ran into “creative limitations” due to her condition.
“I felt like I was rusty songwriting in a way,” the six-time Grammy winner shared. “I was a little freer reaching out to people I had never worked with, saying, ‘Hey, I’ve got this lyric, any chance you want to help me with the music?’ Because it was hard for me to wrap my arms around the music part of it.”
And Amy is thankful that many chose to “rise to the occasion,” resulting in her upcoming album The Me That Remains.
“Music,” she added, “it’s a great shoehorn to get you out of a bad mood.”
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In addition to her brain injury, Amy experienced several medical emergencies in recent years. She underwent open-heart surgery in 2021, before having a cyst removed from her throat nearly three years later.
Still, she kept her head high through it all.
“I feel really good,” she told E! News in a 2023 interview. “I anticipate just getting better.”
For more celebrities speaking on their own health battles, read on.
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