Colt Ford turned 55 in August, but when the country-rap star went to celebrate his birthday, he realized that his best present was something he didnât want.
âWhen I woke up, my wife Megan goes, â Iâll take you to Waffle House,ââ the country singer tells PEOPLE. âAnd I said, âNah, I donât want to go.â Thatâs when I knew I had won. I broke the habit.â
Kicking his junk food habit was an unexpected, but welcome, consequence of Fordâs frightening health crisis 10 months ago. On April 4, the singer suffered a heart attack that put him on life support and left him in a coma for eight days. It was a turning point.
âIâm wearing a 32-inch waist now instead of 44 â but Iâve told everybody thereâs much easier diets,â jokes Ford, who co-wrote Jason Aldeanâs 2012 hit âDirt Road Anthemâ with Brantley Gilbert, and whoâs collaborated with the likes of Toby Keith and Jermaine Dupri. âIâm looking at it as a blessing. Iâm going to be healthier than Iâve ever been.âÂ
Ford, who began his career as a pro golfer, didnât used to think much about his health. Mountain Dew and fried chicken were staples. âI loved that stuff,â says the 5â10ââ Ford, who weighed 340 lbs. at one point. âI was a terrible eater.â
He began reconsidering his lifestyle in 2022 after he was diagnosed with myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune disease that causes muscle weakness. At the time of his heart attack in 2024, he had already slimmed down to 250 lbs.: âI was working on losing weight and feeling great. Then all of a suddenâŠâ Â
His bass player was the first to find him collapsed on the floor of his bus in Arizona after a show. Ford flatlined twice and underwent a 10-hour surgery before being placed on an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machine for a week. He ended up in the hospital and rehab for two months. âIt was life-changing,â he says of the experience. âMy doctor said, âI have no idea how you survived.'â
Since then, Ford, whoâs now 190 lbs., has transformed his diet: âIâve changed everything. If I go by Whataburger, Iâll eat a grilled chicken sandwich. I donât do all the fries and stuff,â he says. âMcDonaldâs used to be my sâ and I loved it but I havenât even craved it.â
His wife also bought him a treadmill, which he uses regularly. âI can get on the treadmill, if the TVâs on, next thing you know, Iâm like, âOh, sâ, I walked eight miles,'â he says.
The singer is releasing a new single this month (âHell Out of Itâ with Michael Ray) and while the song was written before his heart attack, âit has a whole different meaning to me now,â he says. âIâm going to be down here just living and loving the hell out of it. Just everything I do.â
That includes going back on the road in March, despite a few nerves. âComplete honesty, Iâm feeling a ton of anxiety,â he says. âNever was scared of anything before except the good Lord and my mama. And maybe Megan too. But now I am, because I am not a hundred percent back strength-wise.â
After his heart attack, Ford says he lost muscle and is still trying to build it back up. âI couldnât pick up a styrofoam cup with crushed ice in it and feed it to myself,â he says, of waking up from his coma. But, he adds, âI look good and I feel good. Iâm feeling like itâs my Rocky comeback moment.â
Ford says heâs fueled by a sense of gratitude â for the staff at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz., who âtreated me unbelievableâ; for friends like Gilbert, who visited him in the hospital; and for his family, including daughter Annesly, 29, and son Reynolds, 25, who Ford says encouraged him as he was still in critical condition by telling him, âDonât put your gun down. Youâre never out of the fight.â
His wife, Megan, whom he married last year, was by his side every day as he recovered. âSheâs freaking superwoman,â he says.
âGod has more for me to do,â Ford says. âFor some reason he saw fit to give me another chance, so I intend to do something positive with it.â
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