THEY SAID GEORGE JONES WAS HIS OWN WORST ENEMY. By the late 1970s, people in Nashville had stopped making excuses for him. George Jones missed concerts. Walked out of recording sessions. Showed up late, or not at all. Even some of his closest friends said he was throwing away the greatest voice country music had ever heard. Fans were angry. Promoters were furious. Newspapers called him unreliable. But there was one small detail almost nobody noticed. No matter how bad things became, George Jones never stopped singing the sad songs like he meant every word. Years later, friends admitted that behind the chaos was a man carrying more loneliness than anyone understood. George Jones was not just fighting the world. He was fighting himself. And what happened the night George Jones finally walked back onto that stage made people see him very differently. Was George Jones really the villain people remembered — or just a broken man trying to survive?
They Said George Jones Was His Own Worst Enemy By the late 1970s, George Jones had become one of the…