Joni Mitchell is talking and is "expected to make a full recovery" after suffering a stroke and brain aneurysm in March, her lawyer said.
According to court documents
obtained by People magazine, Mitchell’s attorney, Rebecca J. Thyne, visited the singer at her California home on June 26.
"When I arrived she was seated at her kitchen table feeding herself lunch," Thyne reported in the documents.
"It was clear that she was happy to be home and that she has made remarkable progress. She has physical therapy each day and is expected to make a full recovery."
"She also told me that she receives excellent care from caregivers round-the-clock," Thyne added.
Mitchell apparently told her attorney that she would like to retain her friend Leslie Morris as her conservator. A Los Angeles Superior Court judge appointed Mitchell's friend of more than 40 years as temporary conservator in May, allowing the singer to leave the hospital.
Mitchell was hospitalized on March 31 after reportedly being found unconscious in her home.
Rumors circulated that the multiple Grammy Award-winner was in a coma, however her representatives denied those reports.
Mitchell has been public about some aspects of her health in the past, telling interviewers that she was diagnosed with Morgellons Disease, a skin condition that makes travel, singing, and performing difficult.