The Scottish Mail on Sunday

I WANTED OUT, SAYS HARRY THE RELUCTANT PRINCE

In an astonishin­g new confession, he says he considered quitting Royal role... but stayed for Queen He wanted to be a ‘bad boy’ and admits: ‘I spent years kicking my heels... I didn’t want to grow up’

- By Nick Craven by Angela Levin

PRINCE HARRY has admitted that he once ‘wanted out’ of the Royal Family and considered turning his back on the privilege he was born into to live an ‘ordinary life’.

In an extraordin­arily candid interview, the 32-year-old Prince opens up about his troubled 20s and says how, after leaving the Army, he ‘didn’t want to grow up’ and struggled to find a meaningful role for himself.

Speaking to journalist Angela Levin – who revealed last week that Harry believes ‘no one in the Royal Family wants to be King or Queen’ – the Prince gave an astonishin­g insight into how he once felt directionl­ess, and sought an escape from the pomp and pageantry surroundin­g him.

‘I spent many years kicking my heels and I didn’t want to grow up,’ he admitted.

Several years of partying, drinking and heavy smoking followed – which he has previously described as ‘total chaos’ – and Harry admitted coming ‘very close’ to a breakdown several times. And when he finally decided to be more constructi­ve, he even questioned whether remaining a junior Royal would allow him to use his talents effectivel­y – and considered life as a commoner instead.

‘I felt I wanted out but then decided to stay in and work out a role for myself,’ he said, making it clear he was primarily motivated by his loyalty to the Queen.

It was obvious his life in the ‘goldfish bowl’ had left its mark. He added: ‘We don’t want to be just a bunch of celebritie­s but instead use our role for good.’

Harry, who was just 12 when his mother Princess Diana died, admitted feeling most at home during his years in the Army. He was devastated in 2007 when, after ten weeks in Afghanista­n’s Helmand province, his position was leaked by a magazine and he had to be hastily withdrawn for security reasons.

‘I felt very resentful,’ he said. ‘Being in the Army was the best escape I’ve ever had. I felt as though I was really achieving something. I have a deep understand­ing of all sorts of people from different background­s and felt I was part of a team.’

Tellingly, he added that while in the Army, ‘I wasn’t a Prince, I was just Harry’.

But with profession­al help, recommende­d by his brother William, Harry found a way to reinvent himself and carve out a role which has won public respect and affection: promoting the cause of injured servicemen and women, and tackling mental health issues, among other things.

He said that he and William were ‘incredibly passionate with our charities and they have been chosen because they are on the path shown to me by our mother’.

But when asked whether his girlfriend Meghan Markle had in any way advised him on mental health issues, he replied: ‘Absolutely she did not.’

In a sure sign of his maturity, Harry showed he had given serious thought to the future of ‘The Firm’ in the 21st Century.

‘We want to make sure the Monarchy lasts and are passionate about what it stands for,’ he said. ‘But it can’t go on as it has done under the Queen. There will be changes and pressure to get them right.’

Perhaps surprising­ly, he also claimed to be an avid viewer – along with millions of commoners – of The Crown, the hugely popular Netflix drama about his grandmothe­r and the House of Windsor. ‘It’s great but I wish they’d stopped at the end of the first series,’ Harry said. ‘They absolutely must not move on to the younger generation.’

THERE is a moment in the controvers­ial stage play, King Charles III, when Prince Harry renounces his Royal life to become a commoner. It proves to be a brief departure, and the fictional Harry soon resumes his proper role. Yet there is more than a grain of truth in the drama, which was adapted for TV this year.

Because Harry’s search for a role has been long and fraught, and there was indeed a period, however brief, when the young Prince did consider trying to make his mark outside the Royal Family– or ‘The Firm’ – as he told me frankly when we met: ‘There was a time when… I wanted out.’

Harry’s battle for a role was at the heart of my Newsweek interview with the Prince last week, when he made the seemingly unguarded suggestion that no one in the Royal Family would wish to accept the crown, given free choice.

Criticism rained down as he was accused of being a whinger, of failing to give due respect to the institutio­n which has brought him so much privilege.

But I believe he was guilty of no more than thoughtful­ness and honesty – about an emotional past that binds the younger Royals together.

After two meetings at Kensington Palace, and having accompanie­d the Prince to a series of engagement­s, I know that the true measure of Prince Harry lies in something else he told me. I suspect it goes to the heart of his brother William, too.

Halfway through our first meeting, Harry stopped, looked me in the eyes and, out of the blue, said: ‘William and I were 14 and 12 when our mother died and I had to walk a long way behind her coffin, surrounded by thousands of people watching me while millions more did on television. I don’t think any child should be asked to do that, under any circumstan­ces. It certainly wouldn’t happen today.’

It was a burst of openness and maturity that belies his reputation of the past. For I believe him to be not a ‘clown Prince’ or a moaner, but a wounded Prince. And who would not be scarred to lose a mother at such a young age?

Harry, 32, has reached an age where he understand­s this too. Indeed, it is this empathy for those in trouble which makes him such an inspiring figure – finally giving him the role he longs for. In our time together, he was full of self-recognitio­n: laughing at his impatience and admitting how difficult the past had been. At Eton, he said, he just wanted to be a ‘bad boy’. And most tellingly, he summed up those lost years when his beloved career in the Army was taken from him. ‘I spent many years kicking my heels,’ he said. ‘And I didn’t want to grow up.’ WE FIRST met earlier this year in a smart sitting room in Kensington Palace, home not just to Harry but to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. Wearing an open-necked, immaculate­ly pressed ice-blue shirt and brown chinos, he leapt out of one of the pale peach armchairs and strode towards me, smiling and with a hand outstretch­ed.

‘I’ve seen you following me about,’ he said, ‘and wondered if you’d like to ask me any questions. But first have you seen The Crown? [the Netflix drama about the House of Windsor]. It’s great but I wish they’d stopped at the end of the first series. They absolutely must not move on to the younger generation.’

There would be plenty to go on if they did – as would become clear in the course of our interview.

Certainly, he was happy to acknowledg­e his own weaknesses.

‘I can do most things with my hands. My next challenge is to learn to play the guitar. But I get very agitated if I am stuck in front of a computer for long.

‘The passion in me, I can give some of that to other people… well, anyone I am with – but I can sometimes get too impatient.

‘I love to see people excel and succeed. If you give care and considerat­ion to younger people they will flourish. Anyone can do anything if you put your mind to it. You just need passion and belief. If you want

‘In the Army, I wasn’t a Prince – I was just Harry’

to be a success you have to be a team player. No one can do anything by themselves. I was taught that in the Army.’

He had loved his military career and felt its loss keenly. Harry found himself directionl­ess. ‘I spent many years kicking my heels and I didn’t want to grow up,’ he admits.

But that was to change. He sought counsellin­g. And determined to be

I love to see people excel – you just need some passion

more constructi­ve, he began to think more widely.

Harry even questioned whether life as a junior Royal would allow him to use his talents effectivel­y, perhaps with a civilian role.

‘There was a time I felt I wanted out,’ he says. ‘But then I decided to stay in [The Firm] and work out a role for myself.’ More than anything else, he says, that he was motivated to do something to help his grandmothe­r, the Queen, and charity work came to his rescue.

‘We are incredibly passionate with our charities and they have been chosen because they are on the path shown to me by our mother,’ he says. ‘I love charity stuff and meeting people.’

Harry particular­ly dislikes ‘feeling I live in a goldfish bowl’, saying: ‘I am determined to have a relatively normal life and if I am lucky enough to have children they can have one too. We don’t want to be just a bunch of celebritie­s but instead use our role for good.’

Much attention has been drawn to his comment: ‘Is there any one of the Royal Family who wants to be King or Queen? I don’t think so but we will carry out our duties at the right time.’

Yet the truth is that Harry is surprising­ly thoughtful about the future of the Monarchy, saying that he and William would like to pull it into the 21st Century.

‘We want to make sure the Monarchy lasts and are passionate about what it stands for,’ he explains. ‘We feel that the British public and the whole world needs institutio­ns like this – but it can’t go on as it has done under the Queen.

‘There will be changes and pressure to get them right. Things are moving so fast, especially because of social media, so we are involved in modernisin­g the Monarchy.

‘We are not doing this for ourselves but for the greater good of the people and the Monarchy we represent. There is so much negative in the world – we as a family try to bring something positive.’

Does he mind dropping from third to fifth in line to the throne after William and Kate’s children, George and Charlotte?

‘The reason I am now fifth is because of my nephew and niece and I could never wish them away,’ he says. ‘They are the most amazing things ever.’

In addition to these formal interviews, I spent about a year accompanyi­ng Harry on engagement­s around the country. He is a remarkable operator.

There were a few techniques he used. One was to leap from the official car, rush towards whoever is in charge and firmly shake their hand. It gives the genuine impression that he couldn’t wait to get there and is delighted to see them.

Another is to completely focus on the individual he talks to – them and only them. He doesn’t look around, or over their shoulder, and instead engages them totally, and listens carefully to what they say.

Harry readily admits he is not academic, but instead is exceptiona­lly good at connecting with people of all types and ages.

He is reassuring, encouragin­g and knows what to say, how to say it and when. He has a knack of making people feel good about themselves in both significan­t and small ways. He particular­ly excels with former soldiers who have been affected by injuries sustained in battle. It was obvious that by helping others he was also helping himself.

‘I see a lot of myself in these guys,’ he said. ‘They want an opportunit­y to prove themselves and be someone,’ he said.

We went to the Help For Heroes recovery centre at Tedworth House, Wiltshire, where ex-soldiers who had been seriously wounded in battle and suffer psychologi­cal wounds come for help with depression, stress, anger, anxiety and problems with alcohol.

Harry was both compassion­ate and jokey, confessing that he missed the black humour and camaraderi­e of Army life.

The effect was extraordin­ary, almost as if he had given them an injection of hope and confidence.

Jokes and slaps on the back are essential part of his repertoire. He asks direct questions without seeming intrusive.

For example, his first question to Mike ‘Doris’ Day, 34, formerly a sniper section commander in the 4 Rifles, who was hit by a grenade in Afghanista­n in 2009 and whose injuries included a broken back and shrapnel in his head and body, went right to the core: ‘So what has been the biggest effect on you?’ he asked. Day thought for just a moment. ‘I am no longer me,’ he replied quietly.

Harry nodded sympatheti­cally. ‘One of your biggest struggles must be living rather than just existing,’ he continued.

Certainly, he would be happy talking to veterans all day. There

Royal Family can’t go on as it has done – it must change

was less interest in formal meetings. He would sit politely, but occasional­ly one of his legs would tap up and down and a shadow would pass across his face.

Harry similarly disliked the formality of Eton and told me that during his time there he had only wanted to be a ‘bad boy’.

Instead, he was in his element during his decade-long stint in the Army and was devastated when in 2007, after ten weeks working in Afghanista­n, guiding fighters to suspected Taliban targets, his position was leaked and he was withdrawn for security reasons.

‘I felt very resentful,’ he told me. ‘Being in the Army was the best escape I’ve ever had. I felt I was really achieving something.

‘I have a deep understand­ing for all sorts of people from different background­s and felt I was part of a team… I also wasn’t a Prince, I was just Harry.’

Yet this brings me back to 1997, and that image he evoked of a young boy walking in the glare of millions, part of his mother’s cortege. The loss has gnawed at him and it is little wonder it has taken so long for him to deal with it. ‘My search began when I was in my mid-20s,’ Harry said. ‘I needed to fix the mistakes I was making and what was going on with me.’

In April he revealed that bottling up his grief had affected every area of his life, bringing him close to a breakdown several times.

For years he seemed lost. He partied with a dubious set of rich friends, and drank and smoked heavily. But it didn’t help him drown his feelings. ‘Instead of dealing with it I buried my head in the sand and let everything around me tear me to pieces,’ he said.

Eventually, when he was 28, on William’s advice, he sought profession­al help.

Has his relationsh­ip with Meghan Markle helped him? It is a subject he does not wish to discuss, feeling she already has too much unfair scrutiny.

But asked whether she advised him on mental health issues, as some have suggested, there was an answer, sharp and clear: ‘Absolutely she did not.’ The decision has been his, showing a different sort of strength to the courage required in Afghanista­n.

Over the last three years he has faced his demons, worked hard to overcome them and grown into an extraordin­ary young man who has kept some Royal magic, is charming, energetic, sincere and longs to help those who are damaged by war, by accident – or by dysfunctio­nal families.

There is still some way for him to go, but by helping them, this wounded warrior is helping himself – in the best way possible.

 ??  ?? DEVASTATED: Harry and his brother William walk behind their mother’s coffin
DEVASTATED: Harry and his brother William walk behind their mother’s coffin
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ESCAPE’: Harry loved his Army years, below
‘THE BEST ESCAPE’: Harry loved his Army years, below
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