Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Telegraph
The Telegraph
National
Catherine Lough

Prince Harry says he came from a 'broken home' in interview with 'trauma expert'

Prince Harry
Prince Harry

Prince Harry has spoken about his difficulties in coming from a “broken home” in his first interview since news broke that he and his wife have been evicted from Frogmore Cottage.

It has been suggested that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s children may not develop a relationship with the King if the couple are not provided with accommodation in the UK, The Telegraph previously reported.

In a ticketed live-streamed interview on Friday with trauma expert Dr Gabor Mate to promote his memoir, Spare, the Duke described himself as coming from a “broken home” and suggested this had made him suitable for a career in the military.

'In the UK we tend to recruit from broken homes'

The Duke, who served tours in Afghanistan, said he was a “fantastic candidate for the military”, adding: “I don’t know how it is around the rest of the world but certainly in the UK we tend to recruit from broken homes - you know, individuals who are ready for it”.

Dr Mate said during the event, for which tickets costed £19 per head, that the Duke had grown up in an environment where children lacked "being held”, adding of the late Queen Elizabeth: “At some point you wanted to hug your grandmother but it wasn’t done.”

The Duke, who served tours in Afghanistan, said he was a 'fantastic candidate for the military'
The Duke, who served tours in Afghanistan, said he was a 'fantastic candidate for the military'

During the interview, Prince Harry also said he had urged other members of the Royal Family to have therapy.

He said that “a lot of families are complicated and a lot of families are dysfunctional as well”, adding that therapy had taught him a “new language” which he felt his relatives did not speak.

“So I actually felt more pushed aside and then I said to my therapist: ‘Ok, I’ve got a problem — this is working for me … so that I can now live a truly authentic life and be genuinely happy and be a better dad for my kids, but at the same time I’m feeling more and more distant from my loved ones and my family, this is a problem’,” he said.

The Duke also said that a therapist had diagnosed him with PTSD previously, triggered by the death of his mother.

He said that elements of his childhood were "incredible" while others were "incredibly painful", adding that both he and his wife, the Duchess of Sussex, “try their best to make sure you don’t hand on any traumas that you have as a parent”.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.