WILLIE CUT OFF HIS BRAIDS FOR WAYLON’S SOBRIETY — AND YEARS LATER, THAT HAIR SOLD LIKE A PIECE OF OUTLAW COUNTRY’S SOUL. It sounds too strange to be real. But outlaw country was always built from strange things. In 1983, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash hosted a party celebrating Waylon Jennings’ sobriety. Willie Nelson marked the moment by giving Waylon something nobody else could give: his red braids. Years later, those braids were auctioned from Waylon’s estate and sold for $37,000. It was a private badge between men who had lived too hard, stayed up too late, and watched too many friends disappear into the habits that made the music dangerous. Willie did not hand Waylon a lecture. He handed him a piece of himself. A joke, maybe. A blessing, too. The world saw two outlaws. Hats, buses, smoke, songs, the mythology. But in that room, the story was smaller: one friend trying to mark another friend’s survival with something physical enough to keep. Years later, collectors bid money for it. They were not really buying braids. They were buying proof that even outlaws sometimes saved each other quietly.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” WILLIE NELSON CUT OFF HIS BRAIDS FOR WAYLON…