‘Mum was at my wedding’: William on how his mother’s death ‘was like an earthquake’ that took him seven years to get over – but she lives with him always and was there on his big day
In the revealing new interviews, William and Harry open up in agonising detail about the enduring scars they bear over the loss of their mother.
And they speak in extraordinary depth about how they coped with unrelenting grief as they made the journey from boys to young men.
While Harry admits crying over his bereavement just twice in 20 years and speaks of his bewilderment that so many strangers were upset, his elder brother recalls the experience as ‘utterly devastating’.
The starkly contrasting effects on the boys may be partly explained by their respective ages at the time of Diana’s death in August 1997. Harry, just 12, was arguably too young to fully comprehend the enormity of what had happened, and said he even came to believe that ‘not having a mum was normal’.
Watching a nation pouring its collective heart out, he candidly recalls wondering: ‘How is it that so many people can be crying and showing more emotion than I actually am feeling?’
Harry spoke earlier this year of ‘shutting down all of my emotions’ for nearly 20 years, and it is hard to imagine what the psychological legacy of that detachment would be on such a young boy.
It makes his recent admission that he came ‘close to a breakdown’ in his late 20s all the more powerfully moving.
Princess Diana races along the deck of the Royal Yacht Britannia to embrace her two sons in 1991 in Canada
William, on the other hand, was 15 and already in the midst of coping with all the issues visited upon any adolescent, let alone one destined to be king. ‘There’s nothing like it in the world, there really isn’t,’ he says in the ITV film. ‘It’s completely and utterly like an earthquake’s just run through the house and through your life and everything.
‘It’s just… your mind is completely split and it took me a while for it to sink in. You know, losing someone so close to you is utterly devastating, especially at that age.
‘I think it really spins you out – you don’t quite know where you are, what you’re doing and what’s going on.’
For both Princes, Diana was a presence long after her death, and William even says of his wedding in 2011: ‘I did really feel like she was there.’
Touchingly, the boys tried to help each other through their darkest hour, though William admits they were ill-equipped for the task. ‘The family came together, and Harry and I tried to talk as best as we could about it, but, being so small at that age, it’s very difficult to communicate or understand your feelings,’ he says. ‘It’s very complicated.’
Touching: Diana embraces William as Harry watches, on the Royal Yacht Britannia in 1991
William adds that, at his lowest ebb, he would draw inspiration from his mother’s memory.
‘Slowly, you try to rebuild your life and you try to understand what’s happened, and I kept saying to myself that my mother would not want me to be upset, she’d not want me to be down, she’d not want me to be like this,’ he recalls. ‘She was extremely good at showing her love. She was extremely good at showing what we meant to her, and what feelings meant, and how important it was to feel.’
He adds: ‘I kept myself busy as well, which is good and bad sometimes – but it allows you to get through that initial shock phase… I’d say, as much as maybe five to seven years afterwards.’
Either of those dates takes William to his early twenties, when he was an undergraduate at St Andrews, where he met Kate Middleton. Student life gave him a chance, however brief, to experience something akin to a ‘normal’ existence, away from the strictures of Eton and the stuffiness of life in the public eye.
But he explains that Diana’s spirit is constantly at his side: ‘There are not many days that go by that I don’t think of her, you know. Sometimes sad, sometimes very positively. I have a smile every now and again when someone says something, and I think, ‘that’s exactly what she would have said’, or, ‘she would have enjoyed that comment.’
A tender moment with Harry during a Majorca trip in 1987
‘So they always live with you, people you lose, like that. And my mother lives with me every day. I give thanks that I was lucky enough to be her son and that I got to know her for the 15 years that I did.
‘She set us up really well. She gave us the right tools and has prepared us well for life in the best way she could, not, obviously, knowing what was going to happen.’
William says he even felt his mother’s presence at his wedding to Kate at Westminster Abbey in 2011, 30 years after his parents married in 1981.
He recalls: ‘Beforehand I had a lot of time to think about it. When it came to the wedding, I did really feel that she was there… there were times I looked to someone or something for strength – and I very much felt she was there for me.’