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Ty Herndon opens up about the years he spent trying to outrun himself

Ty Herndon is telling one of the most personal stories of his career as he prepares to release his first memoir, What Mattered Most.

The country singer, now 63, is reflecting on the ways his gay identity, religious trauma, addiction, and deep emotional pain shaped much of his life before he finally reached a place of peace.

In a new interview with People, Herndon says writing the book forced him to confront just how much of his life had been ruled by the need to feel loved, accepted, and somehow “normal.”

That idea of normal began haunting him early.

One of the memoir’s opening moments takes readers back to a Baptist church service he attended at just 10 years old, where a preacher described homosexuality as “ungodly” long before Herndon even fully understood what being gay meant.

Still, the message landed.

And like it has for so many queer people raised in rigid religious environments, that kind of shame did not simply disappear with time.

Instead, it settled in quietly and shaped the years that followed.

Herndon describes decades of internalized homophobia, including a long period in which he balanced public relationships with women while keeping his relationships with men private.

He eventually came out publicly in 2014, but the memoir makes clear that coming out was only one part of a much longer and more complicated journey.

According to the interview, the book also addresses methamphetamine addiction, sexual assault, multiple suicide attempts, and the emotional wreckage left behind by years of trying to suppress parts of himself.

What gives the story its weight is not just the pain, but the clarity with which Herndon now looks back on it.

He does not frame the memoir as an attempt to expose anyone else.

Instead, he says he is “telling on myself,” which feels like a revealing and grounded way to describe a book built around accountability, memory, and self-understanding.

One especially moving part of the story involves the women he loved in the past, including ex-wife Renee Posey.

Herndon is candid that revisiting those relationships was one of the hardest parts of writing the memoir, not because the feelings were fake, but because the damage was real.

He says he truly cared about the women in his life and still carries sorrow about the pain he caused them.

That detail gives the story more emotional depth than the usual celebrity-confession arc.

This is not a neat reinvention narrative.

It is a story about someone trying to make peace with the full truth of who he was, who he hurt, and who he has become.

Today, that picture looks very different.

Herndon says he has found his own version of normal in his life with husband Alex Schwartz, describing a grounded domestic life filled with the ordinary things that once seemed out of reach.

There is something quietly powerful in that.

For queer people who grew up being told that their future could never look safe, stable, or loved, a life that feels ordinary can be its own kind of triumph.

That is part of what makes Herndon’s story resonate now.

Not because it is dramatic, but because it speaks to the long shadow of shame and the equally long process of stepping out from under it.

And for a country artist whose career began in a world that was not exactly known for embracing queer openness, the fact that he can now say “I can finally breathe” feels significant.

What Mattered Most: A Memoir can be pre-ordered now (we may receive a small commission if you order through the link).

It is set for release on March 31, and it sounds less like a comeback story than a reconciliation story.

Sometimes that is the more meaningful one.

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