
THE TITLES READ LIKE PRIVATE LETTERS FROM A FRACTURED MARRIAGE — BUT THE MOST HEARTBREAKING DETAIL WAS WHO ACTUALLY CARRIED THEM TO THE MICROPHONE.
In the mid-1960s, as Conway Twitty was successfully leaving his rock and roll past behind to cement his legacy in country music, his albums were filled with sweeping steel guitars and classic Nashville production. With the guidance of legendary songwriter Harlan Howard, Twitty was finding his footing. But hidden within those tracklists were a few specific songs that felt entirely different.
Tracks like “I Don’t Want to Be With Me,” “Don’t Put Your Hurt in My Heart,” and “Funny (But I’m Not Laughing)” did not sound like standard radio fare. They read like exhausted, unsent letters.
The press was always waiting for cracks to show in the home lives of country music’s biggest stars, eager for a spouse to cast blame. But the answers were already printed on the center labels of the vinyl records. The credited songwriter for those three deeply personal tracks was Mickey Jaco—the pen name of Temple Medley, Conway Twitty’s second wife.
Married in 1955, long before Harold Jenkins fully transformed into Conway Twitty, Mickey lived through the grueling years of his early career. While audiences saw the polished performer in the spotlight, the reality of a marriage tethered to a relentless touring schedule often went unspoken. Rather than offering the media a public confession or a bitter interview, Mickey’s name was quietly attached to lyrics detailing betrayal, weariness, and quiet heartbreak.
The songs were placed directly into the Nashville machine. “I Don’t Want to Be With Me” was released on Twitty’s 1966 album Look Into My Teardrops, reaching No. 21 on the Billboard country charts. The following year, “Funny (But I’m Not Laughing)” was released as the B-side to the single “Working Girl,” alongside the measured, sorrowful ballad “Don’t Put Your Hurt in My Heart” on his 1967 Country LP.
Over the years, dramatized versions of country history have sometimes imagined Mickey as a lone acoustic artist, stepping away from grand productions to sing these songs herself as a private diary. But the true, verified story of how these tracks were brought to life carries a far heavier irony. Mickey never took these songs on the road. She never sat under a single warm spotlight to deliver them to a weeping audience.
Instead, she handed the words directly to her husband.
It was Conway Twitty who stood inside the wooden walls of the Decca Records studio under the direction of producer Owen Bradley. It was Conway who stepped up to the microphone to sing the agonizing lyrics of a fractured relationship, recording the exact words credited to the woman waiting for him back home.
Whether the songs were purely her solitary work, or collaborative efforts quietly credited to her name for publishing reasons, the emotional dynamic remained undeniably powerful.
There was no public anger or scandalous press tour. There was only the music. When those records played, women across the country would quietly dry their eyes, recognizing their own silent living rooms and unspoken fractures in the lyrics. They heard the quiet exhaustion of a wife, delivered through the legendary, steady voice of a husband.
Mickey Jaco did not need to step into the spotlight to leave her mark on the genre. She simply wrote the words, kept her dignified silence, and let the man who inspired them carry the weight of singing them to the world.