
“THE SECOND SADDEST DAY OF MY LIFE”: Priscilla Presley’s Emotional Reflection on Losing Elvis and the Heartbreak of Saying Goodbye to Lisa Marie
It was a moment heavy with memory and pain — one that even time cannot soften. In a recent interview filmed quietly in Los Angeles, California, Priscilla Presley, now in her late seventies, spoke with rare honesty about the two days that changed her life forever: the day she lost Elvis Presley, and the day she had to say goodbye to their daughter, Lisa Marie Presley.
Her voice trembled as she recalled the unimaginable decision that no mother should ever face — the moment she was told that Lisa Marie’s condition had become irreversible, and that the machines keeping her alive could no longer help. “I stood there,” Priscilla said softly, “and I knew what had to be done. But my heart… my heart couldn’t accept it.” She paused, holding back tears, before adding, “It was the second saddest day of my life.”
For Priscilla, that grief was layered — not just as a mother, but as the guardian of a legacy that has carried both brilliance and tragedy. She revealed that in the years before her passing, Lisa Marie had struggled deeply with the loss of her son, Benjamin Keough, who died in 2020. “She was completely broken,” Priscilla said. “There were days when she would call me and say, ‘Mom, I don’t want to live anymore.’”
The weight of those words still echoes in Priscilla’s voice. “I tried everything,” she continued. “I reminded her that she still had her girls, that life still had meaning, but grief can be a prison. And sometimes, love isn’t enough to break the bars.”
Witnesses to the interview described a silence that filled the room — not the kind born from awkwardness, but from reverence. It was the sound of a mother speaking the truth of her heart.
As she looked back, Priscilla reflected on how life has come full circle — from the dazzling early years beside Elvis, through the pain of his sudden death in 1977, to the unending ache of losing the daughter they once cradled together. “I’ve had to be strong for everyone else,” she admitted. “But sometimes, when the cameras are off, I just sit quietly and talk to them — both of them. I tell them I love them. I tell them I miss them. I tell them I’m still here.”
She described the bond between Lisa Marie and Elvis as something “written into their souls,” saying that music was their shared language even across generations. “Whenever Lisa sang, you could hear him in her — the same emotion, the same ache, the same tenderness. She carried him with her always.”
Now, Priscilla says, she finds comfort in knowing they are together again. “When I close my eyes, I like to imagine Lisa walking toward her daddy,” she whispered, “and him smiling that beautiful smile of his, saying, ‘Welcome home, baby.’”
Those present say her final words were barely audible — more a prayer than a statement. Yet they lingered in the air long after the cameras stopped rolling.
This wasn’t just an interview. It was a mother’s farewell — an echo of love and loss that spans generations, from Graceland to eternity.
And perhaps that’s why people who have heard her story can’t stop talking about it. Because behind the fame, behind the music, behind all the lights that once surrounded her, Priscilla Presley remains what she’s always been — a mother who loved deeply, lost deeply, and still finds the strength to keep their memory alive.
