“OVER 40 YEARS LATER, THIS DIVORCE SONG STILL MAKES MEN LAUGH AND WINCE.”
Jerry Reed never attacked divorce with bitterness.
He didn’t raise his voice.
He didn’t point fingers.
He smiled sideways and told the story like a man who already knows how it ends.
In She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft), you can almost see him. A Southern man sitting alone at the kitchen table. Early morning light coming through thin curtains. A chipped coffee cup in his hand. The house is too quiet now. Not peaceful. Just empty. He tries to joke about it, because joking is easier than admitting how much it stings.
The house is gone.
The car is gone.
Even the dog is gone.
He lists it all with a grin, like he’s telling a funny story to a buddy at the bar. But that grin is doing a lot of work. It’s holding back regret. It’s holding back pride. It’s holding back the moment where the laughter would stop and something heavier would take its place.
That’s what makes the song last.
The humor feels loose, almost careless, like it was tossed off without thinking. But underneath that easy rhythm, there’s a long silence. The kind of silence men carry instead of talking. The kind they joke about so no one asks too many questions.
Reed understood that divorce doesn’t always come with shouting matches or slammed doors. Sometimes it comes quietly. Sometimes it comes with paperwork and polite smiles. Sometimes it comes with a man standing in an empty driveway realizing everything familiar is suddenly someone else’s.
And instead of turning that realization into anger, he turned it into honesty. Plainspoken. Southern. A little self-deprecating. He didn’t ask for sympathy. He didn’t paint himself as a victim. He just told it like it felt, from the losing side of the deal, and let the listener recognize themselves in it.
That’s why men laugh when they hear it.
And that’s why the laugh doesn’t last very long.
Because after the punchlines fade, what’s left is something uncomfortably real. A reminder of compromises made. Of mistakes half-admitted. Of things you never think you’ll lose until they’re already gone.
You don’t need to have been divorced to understand the song. You just need to have lost something and pretended it didn’t matter. You just need to have smiled through disappointment and hoped no one noticed.
You laugh first.
Then, quietly, you understand why.
And that understanding lingers long after the song fades out.
