“YOU DON’T KNOW ABOUT LONELY TILL IT’S CHISELED IN STONE.” — Vern Gosdin When Vern Gosdin sang those words in 1988, he wasn’t performing. He was bleeding. His third marriage had just collapsed. Instead of hiding, “The Voice” walked into the studio and turned the wreckage into gold. “Out of everything bad, something good will come if you look hard enough,” he once said. “And I got 10 hits out of my last divorce.” He wasn’t joking. “Chiseled in Stone” won CMA Song of the Year 1989. Tammy Wynette called him “the only other singer who can hold a candle to George Jones.” The song’s title isn’t just poetry — it’s a gravestone. A reminder that real loneliness isn’t a bad night. It’s permanent. Etched. Final. Vern lived every word. That’s why, decades later, his voice still cuts deeper than most. Some pain you don’t sing. You survive. The man who wrote it with Vern had buried something far worse than a marriage.
“You Don’t Know About Lonely Till It’s Chiseled in Stone” — The Heartbreak Behind Vern Gosdin’s Greatest Song Some songs…