The Star Malaysia - Star2

It’s all a blur

-

IT seems that even princes are not immune to stage fright. In a new BBC documentar­y, Football, Prince William And Our Mental Health ,the Duke of Cambridge (pic) shared that although he has spent a lifetime in the public eye, he still gets nervous when addressing a crowd.

Rather than trying to imagine the crowd as inanimate objects, he says that his solution is not to see them at all.

“My eyesight started to tail off a little bit as I got older, and I didn’t use to wear contacts when I was working, so when I gave speeches I couldn’t see anyone’s face.”

Blurry vision, it appears, has given Prince William a confidence boost when giving speeches.

He said in the documentar­y: “It helps because it’s just a blur of faces. You can’t see anyone looking at you, and actually, that really helped with my anxiety.”

Prince William also opened up on several other personal topics in the programme, including losing his mother, Princess Diana, at the age of 15, and his fears on fatherhood.

Football, Prince William And Our Mental Health was released on BBC One on May 28.

It is part of a larger campaign, #HeadsUp, a partnershi­p between Heads Together, a mental health initiative led by The Royal Foundation of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, and The Football Associatio­n, the governing body of associatio­n football in England and the Crown dependenci­es of Jersey, Guernsey, and the Isle of Man.

The initiative aims to encourage more dialogue on mental health, especially between men, through football, the “national sport” of Britain. – The Straits Times/Asia News Network

 ?? Photo: Handout ??
Photo: Handout

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia