Prince Harry remembers pain of bereavement

Image source, Scotty's Little Soldiers

Image caption, Prince Harry shared experiences of grieving with charity founder Nikki Scott
  • Author, Sean Coughlan
  • Role, Royal correspondent, 成人快手 News

The Duke of Sussex has had an emotional conversation about bereavement and grieving, with a charity founder who helps military families facing the loss of a loved one.

鈥淵ou convince yourself that the person you鈥檝e lost wants you, or you need, to be sad for as long as possible, to prove to them that they're missed," Prince Harry, whose mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, died when he was 12, said.

"But then there鈥檚 this realisation [that} no they must want me to be happy."

In a video released by the charity, Scotty鈥檚 Little Soldiers founder Nikki Scott, from Norfolk, tells the prince of the moment in 2009 she broke the news to her son that her husband had been killed in Afghanistan. "It shattered his world. It was the worst," she says. "How do you tell a five-year-old this?"

Image source, Scotty's Little Soldiers

Image caption, Prince Harry has helped at events supporting bereaved military families

Prince Harry, an ambassador for the charity who has helped at its children's events, even dressing up as Father Christmas, then describes how difficult talking about feelings of loss can be.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the hardest thing, especially for kids, which is, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to talk about it because it will make me sad,鈥" he says.

"But once realising that if I do talk about it, and I鈥檓 celebrating their life, then actually, things become easier, as opposed to this, 鈥業 am just not going to talk about it and that鈥檚 best form of coping,鈥 when in fact it鈥檚 not." said the prince.

"If you suppress this for too long, you cannot suppress it for ever, it is not sustainable and it will eat away at you inside."

Image source, Scotty鈥檚 Little Soldiers

Image caption, The conversation ends with a hug

The prince also highlights how distressing it can be for people reluctant to talk about their feelings of grief.

"Especially when every defence mechanism in your mind and nervous system and everything else is saying, 鈥橠o not go there,'" he says.

He praises Mrs Scott's efforts in supporting other families in such difficult moments, with the charity aiming to help 1,000 young people each year.

And at the end of the conversation, she says: "I feel the need to give you a hug," to which the prince replies: "Let's do it."