
Speaker A
8:59 - 9:26
"the fire actually kind of renewed my faith. That's essentially a rebirth in that I want to be a better man than I was in the past. I'm remarried and have a wonderful relationship. And not to dwell on things in the past that I can't change, but the wake-up of, look at everything that you still do have in front of you and do appreciate that. That was the catalyst for renewing my faith."
“the fire actually kind of renewed my faith. That's essentially a rebirth in that I want to be a better man than I was in the past. I'm remarried and have a wonderful relationship. And not to dwell on things in the past that I can't change, but the wake-up of, look at everything that you still do have in front of you and do appreciate that. That was the catalyst for renewing my faith.”
It might seem counterintuitive, but the fire actually kind of renewed my faith. That's essentially a rebirth in that I want to be a better man than I was in the past. I'm remarried and have a wonderful relationship. And not to dwell on things in the past that I can't change, but the wake-up of, look at everything that you still do have in front of you and do appreciate that. That was the catalyst for renewing my faith.
Blake Gettys, running for lieutenant governor on Shelley Hughes' ticket, is making his case to Kenai Peninsula voters through three compounding catastrophes: his wife's death, a near-fatal grizzly mauling, and the 2014 Funny River Fire. Whether personal resilience translates into readiness for the office is the question voters will have to answer.
