Bob Saget revealed mortality 'fortunately changed' him in interview months before his death
07.06.2022 - 21:17
/ foxnews.com
Bob Saget spent time reflecting on mortality months before his death. Saget sat down for an interview with "Til This Day with Radio Rahim" in May 2021.The interview is now being released by Luminary in three parts. In the interview, Saget talks about his growth, according to a preview obtained by People magazine.
"I'm proud of myself because I'm onto a new thing," Saget told host Radio Rahim. "At 65, I'm different than I was. We're all rethinking what we said 20 years ago, 10 years ago, four years ago.
I'm not even rethinking it, I just don't have the same way of doing humor or conversation." Bob Saget spoke about mortality in an interview recorded eight months before his death. "I guess therapy, having three kids, watching people pass away in the past few years, mortality, all that stuff has fortunately changed me," he added. "My kids tell me, 'Dad, you're different.
It's so nice to watch you grow.'" Saget lost multiple family members throughout his lifetime, including his uncles, aunts, cousins and sisters. "[The deaths] started when I was, like, 7 and then every two years somebody died," he explained. "[I had] a cousin die – she died at 23 of cancer after giving birth to her child – and then a lot of cousins went through a lot of hardship, so I was like 9, 10, 11, 12, 14.
It was a lot. And then I lost both my sisters." Saget lost many family members throughout his lifetime, including uncles, aunts, cousins and his sisters. (Michael Tran/FilmMagic) "There's so much pain, and my parents couldn't deal with it," he continued.
"And every time they finally started to try to regroup, something else terrible happened. And then one of my sisters [Gay] got this disease Scleroderma in 1994." Saget died on Jan. 9 at the age of
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