https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9602999/Harry-says-family-tried-STOP-Meghan-leaving-going-end-life.htmlHarry fires ANOTHER attack on Royal Family: Prince accuses Charles of making him 'suffer' as a child, The Firm of trying to 'bully him', refusing to let him leave and of 'total neglect' when Meghan was suicidal in new Oprah AppleTV+ show
Harry's new five-part show with Oprah, The Me You Can't See, launched on AppleTV+ overnight in the US
Prince Harry says his family tried to prevent him and Meghan from leaving when she claimed she was suicidal
Duke felt trapped by his family and went through a drinking and drug abuse phase to cope with Diana's death
Harry admits to going to therapy for four years on Meghan's advice, even being filmed meditating to stay calm
Royal claims his family's inability to help Meghan was 'one of the main reasons for leaving' for California
He said: 'Every single ask, request, warning, whatever it is, just got met with total silence, total neglect'
He felt that history was repeating itself with Meghan and was afraid he was going to lose her like he lost Diana
Harry said: 'My mother was chased to her death while in a relationship with someone who wasn't white - and now look what's happened'
By Melissa Koenig For Dailymail.Com and Martin Robinson, Chief Reporter For Mailonline
Published: 03:12, 21 May 2021 | Updated: 11:11, 21 May 2021
Prince Harry today dropped another nuclear 'truth bomb' on the Royal Family accusing them of 'total silence' and 'neglect' when Meghan was suicidal, claiming his father Prince Charles made him 'suffer' as a child and insisting he would not be 'bullied into silence' when he alleged 'The Firm' 'trapped', smeared and then dumped them. In candid interviews with Oprah Winfrey on his new five-part AppleTV+ show, The Me You Can't See, the Duke of Sussex said he and his wife felt abandoned by his relatives and this was one of their 'biggest reasons' for leaving for California last year. He told Oprah: 'Certainly now I will never be bullied into silence', adding: 'I thought my family would help, but every single ask, request, warning, whatever it is, just got met with total silence, total neglect. We spent four years trying to make it work. We did everything that we possibly could to stay there and carry on doing the role and doing the job. But Meghan was struggling.'
He added: 'That feeling of being trapped within the family, there was no option to leave. Eventually when I made that decision for my family, I was still told, "You can't do this", And it's like, "Well how bad does it have to get until I am allowed to do this?". She [Meghan] was going to end her life. It shouldn't have to get to that.'
The Duke of Sussex also accused his family of smearing them to the press before their bombshell Oprah interview in March, describing being woken in their £11million mansion by his wife 'crying in her pillow' to stifle the noise on the eve of its broadcast. He said: 'That’s heartbreaking. I held her. We talked. She cried and she cried and she cried.'
The Apple TV series was released in full online just four hours after his brother Prince William issued an extraordinary attack on the BBC for ruining Princess Diana's life after her Panorama interview with 'rogue reporter' Martin Bashir in 1995. But despite a judge-led inquiry yesterday finally confirming their mother was deceived into doing the show her friends say began a chain of events leading directly to her death in Paris less than two years later, Harry launched yet another full-frontal attack on the Royal Family, who are private exasperated and upset about his constant 'pot shots' from across the Atlantic but are unable to respond publicly. Today, as Harry launched another volley of attacks on the royals before insisting he wanted 'reconciliation and healing' with his family, he also claimed:
* Meghan told him she wanted to kill herself and had planned how to do it but was only prevented from killing herself by concern over him 'losing another woman in my life';
* Harry claims the royal family tried to smear Meghan before their Oprah interview, saying she woke him up while crying into her pillow;
* Duke says he drank alcohol and took drugs to cope with his mother's death, admitting he would drink a week's worth of booze on a Friday or Saturday night to 'feel less like he was feeling'. The Duke describes how he is still haunted by the sound of hooves after being forced to his mother's coffin pass him on The Mall. He says at 12 he already knew: 'I didn't want the life';
* He again blasted his father's parenting, saying Charles informed him and William that they would suffer the same problems he did but he was determined to 'break the cycle'. He also slammed Prince Charles for 'not making it right' for his two sons;
* Prince Harry reveals one of Archie's first words was 'Grandma', along with crocodile and hydrate, and it made him 'really sad' because his late mother Diana 'should be here' to see her grandson grow up. But he said he thinks she would be 'incredibly proud' of him and says he feels her 'presence' with him in California living a life she 'always wanted for herself';
* Returning to London to attend Prince Philip's funeral last month was a 'trigger' for his anxiety, and a test of his ability to cope, showing how he meditates to banish negative thoughts as he was 'worried and afraid' about returning to the UK;
* Harry says he felt forced by the royals to go on a trip to Nepal and constant jet-setting became 'hectic to the point of exhaustion';
Harry and Oprah made The Me You Can't See to focus on mental illness and mental wellness, and features tearful interviews with Ms Winfrey, actress Glenn Close and pop superstar Lady Gaga who describes how she had a nervous breakdown was raped as a teenager and became pregnant.
But the five, one-hour shows, are dominated by Harry addressing the traumatic memories from his childhood, including the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, his use of drugs and alcohol as a crutch to cope with losing his mother and his decision to quit as a frontline royal last year and head for the US with his 'struggling' American wife. The Duke of Sussex described how his Meghan first told him she wanted to kill herself, while six months pregnant with Archie, on the way to the Royal Albert Hall in London in January 2019, and how she spoke to him of the 'practicalities of how she was going to end her life'. Harry said it reminded him of his mother's final weeks in 1997, saying that it was when he was 12 and watching his mother's coffin that he first thought: 'I didn't want the life'.
He said: 'Meghan decided to share with me the suicidal thoughts and the practicalities of how she was going to end her life', adding that she later decided against it because she didn't want Harry to lose 'another woman in my life'.
The Duke said 'history was repeating itself', because Princess Diana was with Dodi Fayed, who was Egyptian by birth, when she died in 1997, saying there was a real fear that he would lose Meghan too. He told Oprah: 'My mother was chased to her death while she was in a relationship with someone who wasn't white. And now look what's happened. And it all comes back to the same people, the same business model, the same industry,' he said. He added: 'They’re not going to stop until she dies. It’s incredibly triggering to potentially lose another woman in my life'.
Harry doesn't name who is out to kill Meghan, but it is believed he is talking the media. Accusing his own family of briefing against them, he said: 'Before the Oprah interview had aired, because of their headlines and that combined effort of The Firm and the media to smear her, I was woken up in the middle of the night to her [Meghan] crying in her pillow because she doesn’t want to wake me up because I’m already carrying too much. That’s heartbreaking. I held her. We talked. She cried and she cried and she cried.'
The Duke binged on alcohol and drugs to cope with the death of his mother, saying that being in London is a 'trigger' for his 'anxiety', and describes how how he is still haunted by the 'sound of the horse's hooves going along The Mall' as his mother's coffin passed him, slamming Prince Charles for 'not making it right' for his two sons. Harry also used the five-part renew his criticisms of his father's parenting, and how the Queen had also brought up Charles, insisting he had to quit as a frontline royal to 'break the cycle'. He said: 'My father used to say to me when I was younger, he used to say to both William and I, "Well, it was like that for me so it's going to be like that for you," Harry says, 'That doesn't make sense. Just because you suffered, that doesn't mean your kids have to suffer. In fact, quite the opposite. If you suffered, do everything you can to make sure that whatever negative experiences you had, you can make it right for your kids.'
'Isn't this all about breaking the cycle?' he asked, rhetorically. 'Isn't this all about making sure that history doesn't repeat itself.'
Harry insisted he has 'no regrets' about his decision to emigrate to LA saying he believes Diana 'helped me get here' and that Meghan's insistence he went into therapy has 'equipped me to be able to take on anything', including 'reconciliation and healing' with his British family.
At one point he speaks to a therapist and is filmed having a form of therapy known as EMDR - known as Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing. Harry is seen comforting himself with a series of movements such as closing his eyes, crossing his arms and calming his breathing while remembering traumatic events in his past.
Harry's candid interviews with The Me You Can't See is going to cause more tensions with the Royal Family, who were braced for another attack overnight. But they may not have been ready for the amount of criticism he hands out in the five-part series, with Harry telling his co-host and co-producer Oprah Winfrey that his relatives trapped, smeared and abandoned him and Meghan. But he said would 'never be bullied into silence' in the future. He did not go to his family when Meghan felt suicidal because he was ashamed the situation had got 'that bad' and also suspected the royals would not have been able to help. The duke said: 'That was one of the biggest reasons to leave, feeling trapped and feeling controlled through fear, both by the media and by the system itself which never encouraged the talking about this kind of trauma. Certainly now I will never be bullied into silence.'
In the candid interviews, the prince discusses his failure to process the grief from the death of his mother; the helplessness he felt to protect her; his dependence on drugs and alcohol to numb the pain; his anxiety and sense of being trapped in the palace; his family's refusal to help when Meghan felt suicidal and how therapy helped him 'break the cycle.'
'For me, therapy has equipped me to be able to take on anything,' he said.
He says his family tried to prevent him and Meghan from leaving when she claims she was suicidal and admits to drinking and doing drugs in his 30s. 'Eventually when I made that decision for my family, I was still told, 'You can't do this,' Harry recounted to Oprah. 'And it's like, 'Well how bad does it have to get until I am allowed to do this?' She [Markle] was going to end her life. It shouldn't have to get to that.'
When asked if he has any regrets, he says it is not taking a stand earlier in his relationship with Meghan Markle, claiming she was only stopped from killing herself by concern over Harry'losing another woman in my life'.
The pair had been married for less than a year and she was pregnant with their son Archie when, in January 2019, she told him she was deeply depressed. Markle first revealed the trauma of that night in her March interview with Winfrey. 'She was completely sane, yet at the quiet of night, these thoughts woke her up,' Harry said.
'The thing that stopped her from seeing it through was how unfair it would be on me after everything that had happened to my mum and to now to be put in a position of losing another woman in my life with a baby inside of her, our baby.'
Harry said that he did not know how to handle her confession. 'I'm somewhat ashamed of the way that I dealt with them,' he said.
'And of course, because of the system that we were in and the responsibilities and the duties that we had, we had a quick cuddle and then we had to get changed to jump in a convoy with a police escort and drive to the Royal Albert Hall for a charity event. Then step out into a wall of cameras and pretend as though everything's okay. There wasn't an option to say, 'you know what, tonight, we're not going to go' because just imagine the stories that come from that.'
The prince, whose new series airs on Apple TV+ from May 20, told Winfrey he feared 'history repeating itself' after he began dating Markle , and was reminded of his mother being pursued to her death while she was dating 'someone who wasn't white'. Diana, the princess of Wales, died in 1997 alongside Egyptian film producer Dodi Al Fayed, who she had been dating for several months. Harry said he felt there were parallels in their stories when he followed in his mother's footsteps and began dating a person of color. My mother was chased to her death while she was in a relationship with someone who wasn't white,' he said.
'And now look what's happened. It's incredibly triggering to potentially lose another woman in my life. Like, the list is growing. And it all comes back to the same people, the same business model, the same industry.'
In the candid interview, the prince discusses his failure to process the grief from the death of his mother; the helplessness he felt when he struggled to protect her; and his dependence on drugs and alcohol to numb the pain. He spoke of his anxiety and sense of being trapped in the palace, and his family's refusal to help when Meghan felt suicidal. He said therapy helped him 'break the cycle.' 'For me, therapy has equipped me to be able to take on anything,' he said.
He says his family tried to prevent him and Meghan from leaving when she was suicidal and admits to drinking and doing drugs in his 30s. Eventually when I made that decision for my family, I was still told, 'You can't do this,' Harry told Winfrey.
'And it's like, 'Well how bad does it have to get until I am allowed to do this?' She [Markle] was going to end her life. It shouldn't have to get to that.'
When asked if he has any regrets, he says it is not taking a stand earlier in his relationship with Markle. Harry told Winfrey that the trauma from his childhood ran deep. 'I always wanted to be normal, as opposed to being Prince Harry, just being Harry,' he says.
'It was a puzzling life and, unfortunately, when I think about my mum the first thing that comes to mind is always the same one, over and over again: Strapped in the car, seatbelt across. My brother in the car as well, and my mother driving and being chased by three, four, five mopeds with paparazzi on.'
He said that his mother was vulnerable, exposed, and given no support. 'She was almost unable to drive because of the tears, there was no protection,' he recalled.
'One of the feelings that come up is helplessness. Being too young, being a guy too young to be able to help a woman, in this case, your mother. And that happened every single day until the day she died.'
The 36-year-old, who began dating Markle in 2016 and married her in 2018, said that he has been seeing a therapist for the past four years. He told Winfrey that he found it incredibly beneficial, and the process helped him deal with the trauma of his mother's death. He explained that he simply tried to push his mother from his mind. 'I don't want to think about her, because if I think about her then it's going to bring up the fact that I can't bring her back and it's just going to make me sad,' he said.
'What's the point in thinking about something sad, what's the point of thinking about someone that you've lost and you're never going to get back again. And I just decided not to talk about it.'
In his 20s and early 30s the prince self-medicated with alcohol and drugs, he has revealed. 'Towards my late 20s, I was starting to ask questions of should I really be here? That was when I suddenly started going, 'You can't keep hiding from this.''
He said his family could not understand his attitude, and his need to deal with the grief. 'Family members have said just play the game and your life will be easier,' Harry told Winfrey.
'But I have a hell of a lot of my mum in me. I feel as though I am outside of the system but I'm still stuck there. The only way to free yourself and break out is to tell the truth.'
He said that the attention he and his wife get 'makes my blood boil'.
The prince explained: 'We get followed. Photographed, chased, harassed. The clicking of cameras and the flashes of the cameras makes my blood boil. It makes me angry and takes me back to what happened to my mom and what I experienced as a kid. Not just traditional media, but also social media platforms as well. I felt completely helpless.'
Meghan told Harry HOW she was going to kill herself while six months pregnant
Prince Harry has told Oprah Winfrey that his wife Meghan Markle was only prevented from killing herself by concern over him 'losing another woman in my life'.
In his new docuseries, The Me You Can't See, Harry opens up about the night Markle told him she was suicidal. The pair had been married for less than a year and she was pregnant with their son Archie when, in January 2019, she told him she was deeply depressed. Markle first revealed the trauma of that night in her March interview with Winfrey. 'The thing that stopped her from seeing it through was how unfair it would be on me after everything that had happened to my mum and to now to be put in a position of losing another woman in my life with a baby inside of her, our baby,' he said.
'The scariest thing for her was her clarity of thought. She hadn't 'lost it.' She wasn't crazy. She wasn't self-medicating, be it through pills or through alcohol. She was absolutely sober. She was completely sane. Yet in the quiet of night, these thoughts woke her up.'
Harry said that he did not know how to handle her confession. 'I'm somewhat ashamed of the way that I dealt with them,' he said.
'And of course, because of the system that we were in and the responsibilities and the duties that we had, we had a quick cuddle and then we had to get changed to jump in a convoy with a police escort and drive to the Royal Albert Hall for a charity event. Then step out into a wall of cameras and pretend as though everything's okay. There wasn't an option to say, 'you know what, tonight, we're not going to go' because just imagine the stories that come from that.'
He said that the night was, for him, a revelation. He realized that they could not continue the way they were. 'While my wife and I were in those chairs, gripping each other's hand, the moment the lights go down, Meghan starts crying. I'm feeling sorry for her, but I'm also really angry with myself that we're stuck in this situation,' Harry said.
'I was ashamed that it got this bad. I was ashamed to go to my family. Because to be honest with you, like a lot of other people my age could probably relate to, I know that I'm not gonna get from my family what I need. I then had a son who I'd far rather be solely focused on, rather than every time I look into his eyes, wondering whether my wife is going to end up like my mother and I'm going to have to look after him myself.'
Prince Harry says Royals tried to STOP him and Meghan leaving after 'she was going to end her life'
But, the prince said, his family tried to stop him and Meghan from leaving, even as she was supposedly feeling suicidal. 'That feeling of being trapped within the family, there was no option to leave. Eventually when I made that decision for my family, I was still told, 'You can't do this.' And it's like, 'Well how bad does it have to get until I am allowed to do this?' She [Markle] was going to end her life. It shouldn't have to get to that.'
He said his biggest regret was not taking a stand earlier in his relationship with Markle, claiming a barrage of attacks on her won't stop 'until she dies. 'It's incredibly triggering to potentially lose another woman in my life,' Harry said in the interview with Oprah. 'Like the list is growing, and it all comes back to the same people, the same business model, the same industry.'
Harry claims the royal family tried to SMEAR Meghan before Oprah interview
Prince Harry has claimed the royal family tried to smear Meghan before her interview with Oprah Winfrey, said The Firm is still 'trying to control the narrative' and that he has 'no regrets' since 'speaking his truth'. In a series of interviews on Apple TV's The Me You Can't See, the Duke of Sussex also accused the Royal Family of 'total silence' and 'total neglect' when Meghan was suicidal, claiming his father Prince Charles made him 'suffer' as a child. He said: 'Before the Oprah interview had aired, because of their headlines and that combined effort of The Firm and the media to smear her, I was woken up in the middle of the night to her [Meghan] crying in her pillow - because she doesn’t want to wake me up because I’m already carrying too much. That’s heartbreaking. I held her. We talked. She cried and she cried and she cried.'
The Duke said he and his wife felt abandoned by his relatives and this was one of their 'biggest reasons' for leaving for California last year, insisting he had 'no regrets' about his decision. He added: 'That feeling of being trapped within the family, there was no option to leave. Eventually when I made that decision for my family, I was still told, 'You can't do this', And it's like, 'Well how bad does it have to get until I am allowed to do this?'. She [Meghan] was going to end her life. It shouldn't have to get to that.'
Prince Harry shown closing his eyes in footage from EDMR session that has 'freed him'
Prince Harry has revealed he becomes 'tense and update' whenever he visits Britain, during a therapy session filmed on camera in which he said: 'London is a trigger.'
The Duke of Sussex said in his new mental health documentary series with Oprah Winfrey that he has 'always felt worried' for most of his life when he flies back to London, but only became aware of this after doing therapy. Appearing on Apple TV's The Me You Can't See, Harry told how he remembered 'everything felt tense' when he travelled to London 'because of what happened to my mum, and because of what I experienced and what I saw'.
The Duke, who co-created the documentary, has addressed traumatic memories from his childhood, including the death of his mother Diana, Princess of Wales, and the impact of social media on him as well as his wife Meghan. He was filmed having a form of therapy known as EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing), which is a treatment technique for helping someone come to terms with traumatic experiences. This saw Harry carry out a series of movements such as closing his eyes and crossing his arms while remembering events in his past. The Duke, who now lives in an £11million mansion in Montecito, California, carried out the therapy via videolink with Sanja Oakley, a UK-based psychotherapist who used to be a trauma specialist for London Underground. Prince Harry told the documentary, released today: 'For most of my life I've always felt worried, concerned, a little bit tense and uptight whenever I fly back into the UK, whenever I fly back into London. And I could never understand why. I was aware of it, I wasn't aware of it at the time when I was younger, but after I started doing therapy stuff I became aware of it. I was like, why do I feel so uncomfortable? And of course for me London is a trigger, unfortunately, because of what happened to my mum, and because of what I experienced and what I saw.'
He told London-based Ms Oakley: 'Happens every time. I can't remember the first time it happened, I can just remember the feeling, anxiety, like a hollow empty feeling almost of nervousness, is it fear? Everything feels tense. It's being the hunted, and being helpless and knowing that you can't do anything about it. There is no escape. There is no way out of this.'
Speaking to Oprah in episode three about his work with Ms Oakley, he added: 'Wherever I could I wanted to understand more about what was going on and why my nervous system was reacting the way that it was. I quickly established that if this relationship was going to work then I was going to have to deal with my past, because there was anger there, and it wasn't anger at her, it was just anger, and she recognised it, she saw it. Well, so how do I fix this? And it was a case of needing to go back to the past, go back to the point of trauma, deal with it, process it, and then move forward. Having now done therapy for four and bit years, five years now, for me it's all about prevention. That doesn't mean we have to speak to them every single day, but to have someone that can help guide us and create that awareness in our own life to when we might be feeling pain and how to get out of that and what the tools are available to us on any given day to make sure that it doesn't snowball into something bigger. EMDR is always something that I've wanted to try and that was one of the varieties of different forms of healing or curing that I was willing to experiment with. And I never would have been open to that had I not put in the work and the therapy that I've done over the years.'
Harry says he was 'worried and afraid' to return to UK for Philip's funeral
For Harry, returning to London to attend Prince Philip's funeral last month meant once more facing a place where he felt trapped and hunted by cameras. It would be a test of his ability to cope with the anxiety that was bubbling up again. 'I was worried about it, I was afraid,' Harry told The Associated Press during a recent joint interview with Oprah Winfrey to promote a mental-health series they co-created and co-executive produced for Apple TV+.
He was able to work through any trepidation using coping skills learned in therapy.
'It definitely made it a lot easier, but the heart still pounds,' said Harry, the Duke of Sussex and grandson of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and her late husband Philip.
In 'The Me You Can't See,' which debuted Thursday night on Apple's streaming service, Harry reveals that he first saw a therapist approximately four years ago at the encouragement of then-girlfriend Meghan. They'd had an argument and she recognized his anger seemed misplaced. The series is another chapter in the unprecedented openness that Harry has brought to his life and his royal family relationships since stepping away from his duties and moving with his wife to California. In March, he and Meghan gave a headline-making interview to Winfrey that elicited a rare public response from the palace. Harry's self-work may be relatively recent but he and older brother William, The Duke of Cambridge, have long championed the importance of mental health. In 2016, Harry, William and his wife Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, launched Heads Together, an initiative to speak up and not be ashamed to ask for help when mental well-being is at stake. Their collective work led to interactions with people across the globe, from all walks of life, and they recognized a common thread. 'Sharing your story in order to be able to save a life or help others is absolutely critical,' said Harry.
Harry is practicing what he preaches and laying bare his own struggles with trauma and grief. He describes in 'The Me You Can't See,' the instances of feeling helpless as a young boy while riding in the car with his mother, Princess Diana, who cried as they were surrounded by paparazzi and she struggled to drive. Years later, Diana was killed in Paris after the car she and friend Dodi Fayed were riding in, crashed during a high-speed chase to flee cameras. Harry was 12 and suppressed his own feelings to meet the mourning public gathered outside Kensington Palace.

Cameras rolled and snapped away as he walked behind her casket to Diana's funeral, alongside William, father Prince Charles, Philip and Diana's brother Charles Spencer. Harry's revelations coincide with Queen Elizabeth's official confirmation a few months ago that he and Meghan will not return to their senior royal positions within the family, following a one-year trial period. The couple now lives about 90 minutes north of Los Angeles in an exclusive area near Santa Barbara called Montecito. They count Winfrey, Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom as neighbors. The paparazzi still lurks but it's less intense than in Los Angeles. This new, outspoken prince who shares his emotions is a contrast to the 'never complain, never explain,' 'keep calm and carry on' mantras that are part of the prototypical British way. The British tabloids have had a field day picking apart his statements. Some royal commentators have also cried foul over a contradiction between seeking a private life yet granting interviews and revealing family strife. Harry appears to be cautious in choosing what he wants to speak about, and neither he nor Meghan seem interested in sharing their every move with the world. They do not operate a social media account. He is undeterred by naysayers, he says, because there's a greater good in being honest about his struggles. 'I see it as a responsibility. I don't find it hard to open up,' he said. 'Knowing the impacts and the positive reaction that it has for so many people that also suffer, I do believe it's a responsibility.'
Winfrey was already working with Apple to develop a series on mental health when a conversation with Harry sparked the idea to join forces. 'We were having a conversation and I asked him, 'What are the two most important issues you think facing the world today?' And he said immediately, 'climate change and mental health.' She mentioned the project and Winfrey recalls him later saying , 'Oh, by the way, if you ever need any help with that give me a call.' And I went and turned around and said, 'What's your number?'
Winfrey's existing partnership with Apple created a rare opportunity to reach the vast number of people who use the company's devices, Harry said. 'If that's in a billion pockets on a billion screens, then maybe we can really start a global conversation about this,' he said.
Winfrey recalls some of her own childhood traumas in 'The Me You Can't See.' In addition to her and Harry's stories, the series also features accounts from both regular people and celebrities including Lady Gaga and Glenn Close, who speak candidly about their own experiences with mental illness. Winfrey said Harry pushed to present a global perspective. 'This has got to be a world thing and not just a U.S. thing,' she recounted him saying, adding: 'I think we've accomplished that really well.'
Harry jokes he's 'slowly catching up' to Winfrey's decades of inner-work and encouragement of others to do the same whether on 'The Oprah Winfrey Show' or her 'Super Soul Sunday' interviews on OWN. Even Winfrey said she's had a lot to learn. 'I have dealt personally with one of the girls from my school (Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa), who had schizophrenia,' Winfrey said. 'Only after hearing the doctor say that 'it's a diagnosis. It's not your life, it's not who you are,' that I had my great awakening about it. 'That is not you. You are a person who has a diagnosis of schizophrenia.' That is powerful.'
Prince Harry reveals one of Archie's first words was 'Grandma' Diana as he shares new footage of son playing on swing
Prince Harry has revealed his sadness that his son Archie will never get to meet his late mother, Princess Diana, claiming that her name was among the youngster's first words. In his new mental health series with Oprah Winfrey The Me You Can't See, the Duke of Sussex said: 'I got a photo of her in his nursery, and it was one of the first words that he said apart from "mama", "papa", it was then "grandma". Grandma Diana. It's the sweetest thing, but at the same time, it makes me really sad because she should be here.'
The doting father also released new footage of his toddler son playing on the beach and on the swings at home. In one clip in the programme believed to have been taken in the grounds of the Santa Barbara mansion, the toddler can be seen sitting on a swing with his back facing the camera, while another person, believed to be Prince Harry, can be seen swinging alongside him. Elsewhere in the documentary series, the couple included colour footage first seen in black-and-white during their explosive Oprah interview, which shows their son Archie running along a beach with Meghan Markle, 39. However, in both moments, royal fans will only be able to get a glimpse of Archie's face. It comes days after royal fans were left disappointed over not seeing Archie properly after Meghan and Harry released a new picture of their son to celebrate his second birthday. Proud parents Meghan Markle and Prince Harry previously revealed more details of their son Archie's extensive vocabulary during a more light-hearted moment in their bombshell Oprah interview. Harry, 36, and Meghan, 39, who now live in Montecito, California, said that their talkative toddler's new favourite thing to say is 'hydrate', a week after his doting dad told James Corden's Late Late Show that Archie's first word had surprisingly been 'crocodile.' However the focus of the interview was on Prince Harry and his mental health. He revealed he was discouraged from discussing his mental health as a child following the sudden death of his mother, and when he tried to ask his family for help more recently when Meghan claimed she was feeling suicidal he was 'met with total silence' and neglect.
Harry reveals he would 'pour with sweat' due to stress of public events
Prince Harry has said the stress of going to public events would make him pour with sweat, saying 'One bead of sweat feels like the whole face is pouring down'.
The Duke of Sussex disclosed his nerves at occasions he had attended as a working Royal and how he would feel as his face was bright red and he was 'two or three degrees warmer than everybody else'. He said his problem was so serious at functions it would take finding someone else who was similarly nervous and sweating to calm his nerves. The Royal revealed the symptoms of his anxiety as part of his mental health series with chat show queen Oprah Winfrey. He said: 'Every time I put a suit and tie on and having to do the role, to go "Right, game face" look in the mirror, right let’s go. Before I left the house I was pouring with sweat, my heart rate was racing. I was in fight or flight mode. Freaking out every single time I jumped in the car, every single time I would see a camera. I would just start sweating. I would feel as though my body temperate was two or three degrees warmer than everybody else in the room. I would convince myself that my face was bright red and therefore everybody could see how I was feeling, but nobody would know why. So it was embarrassing. You get in your head about it and then you’re just like "everybody is looking at me". One bead of sweat feels like the whole face is pouring down. Just sweating and then all in my head, this is so embarrassing, what are they thinking of me? They have no idea, I can’t tell them. Everywhere I go, every time I meet someone, it’s almost like I am being drained of this energy, picking up on other people’s emotion, finally I would bump into someone more than me and I would stop, be able to speak to them and everything would calm down and I could move on again.’
Harry says he took alcohol and drugs to cope with mother's death
Prince Harry has said the trauma of his mother's death led him to use alcohol and drugs to 'mask' his emotions and to 'feel less like I was feeling'. The Duke of Sussex was just 12 when Diana, Princess of Wales, died in August 1997 in a car crash while being pursued by the press in Paris. In the first three episodes of Apple TV's The Me You Can't See, the royal addressed traumatic memories from his childhood including the moment he was famously photographed with his brother, father, uncle and grandfather walking behind Diana's coffin at her funeral. The 36-year-old told his series co-host Oprah Winfrey: 'I was willing to drink, I was willing to take drugs, I was willing to try and do the things that made me feel less like I was feeling.'
The royal said he would drink a week's worth of alcohol on a Friday or Saturday night 'not because I was enjoying it but because I was trying to mask something'. It was like I was outside of my body and just walking along doing what was expected of me. (I was) showing one tenth of the emotion that everybody else was showing: This was my mum you never even met her.'
The series focuses on mental health, with Harry telling Winfrey the trauma of the loss caused him to suffer anxiety and severe panic attacks from ages 28 to 32. 'I was just all over the place mentally,' he said.
'Every time I put a suit on and tie on having to do the role, and go, "right, game face", look in the mirror and say, "let's go". Before I even left the house I was pouring with sweat. I was in fight or flight mode.'