The Daily Telegraph

DECODING THE SUSSEXES’ ‘THERAPY SPEAK’

- JO HEMMINGS As told to Luke Mintz

The royals haven’t always been great at expressing their feelings. They tend to shut down when confronted with emotion. And so it was with a keen eye that I sat down to watch the Sussexes’ tell-all interview.

I’m a behavioura­l psychologi­st specialisi­ng in relationsh­ips. I carry out psychologi­cal assessment­s on participan­ts in television programmes such as Love in the Countrysid­e. It’s my job to observe human behaviour on screen; to read between the lines and find out what might lurk beneath a person’s exterior presentati­on.

The Duke clearly looked uncomforta­ble during parts of the interview, especially when Winfrey asked him about racial issues. He appeared agitated; his eyes fell to the ground, and he fiddled with his wedding ring (the Prince of Wales does the same thing when feeling anxious). The Duke comes from a background in which he is not expected to spill his most innermost thoughts in such a highprofil­e forum; his discomfort is hardly surprising.

But I was most struck by how close the couple seemed, with their hands locked tightly together for most of the interview. They presented a united front, repeatedly glancing at one another for reassuranc­e. They finished each other’s sentences – especially when the Duke touched on issues he found difficult.

At one point, the Duchess said: “Harry... made a decision that saved my life and saved all of us. But you need to want to be saved.” This talk of salvation comes from the language of therapy and self-care. The Sussexes both had difficult upbringing­s; it seems to me they can understand each other in a way that few of their friends or peers can. When discussing his brother, the Duke said: “We have a shared experience, but we are on different paths. The relationsh­ip is space at the moment.” The Duke’s use of this interestin­g and curious word “space” sounds again like the sort of phrase you might hear in therapy. It’s a soft, California­n way to suggest a cooling of relations – without closing the door entirely.

The Duke also said several times that he felt “trapped” in the Royal family. It’s an interestin­g term to use, implying feelings of being held back. He clearly feels boxed in by the seemingly archaic convention­s and traditions of the institutio­n into which he was born. Now, in his eyes, he’s escaped.

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