The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Duke opens up in documentar­y on loss and parenting

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The Duke of Cambridge has revealed the “lifechangi­ng” experience of having children brought back the emotions he felt following the death of his mother.

Speaking candidly in a new BBC documentar­y, William said if you live through a “traumatic” event, like losing a parent at a young age, those feelings can resurface during the amazing but scary period of parenthood.

The duke, who has three children – Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis – admitted he had found things “overwhelmi­ng” at times but he and wife Kate supported each other as they went through those “moments” together.

William’s comments will feature in a forthcomin­g film that examines men’s mental health through the prism of football, featuring a discussion with former profession­al footballer Marvin Sordell in which the ex-striker said he struggled when he became a father for the first time a few years ago.

Sordell said it was “the hardest time in my life” and he found it difficult to be a role model to his child having grown up without a father.

The former Bolton Wanderers player asked the duke, with fathers under so much “pressure”, who he went to when he was “struggling”, and William replied: “Having children is the biggest life-changing moment, it really is.

“And I agree with you, I think when you’ve been through something traumatic in life – and that is like you say your dad not being around, my mother dying when I was younger – your emotions come back in leaps and bounds because it’s a very different phase of life.

“And there’s no one there to... help you, and I definitely found it very, at times, overwhelmi­ng.”

William was 15 and his brother Harry just 12 when their mother Diana, Princess of Wales was killed in a Paris car crash in 1997.

In a documentar­y released last year, that also dealt with mental health, the duke said that following his bereavemen­t there was “pain like no other pain”.

The documentar­y had access to the duke over the course of a year and features him meeting players, fans and managers from grassroots to the elite as part of his efforts to start the biggest ever conversati­on on mental health, through football.

Football, Prince William And Our Mental Health will be broadcast on Thursday at 8.05pm on BBC1.

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