Prince Harry says he’ll regret last conversation with Diana forever | Royal | News

Prince Harry was incredibly open to the impact of Diana’s Princess Diana on the mental health, and his mother was only 12 years old when he was tragically killed in a car accident in Paris in 1997.
The Duke of Sussex and his brother Prince William explained many stories about Diana in the years since his death. The two princes were on vacation at the family land with their father and other members of the royal family when they heard sad news. In the 2017 documentary, Prince Harry, titled Diana Diana, Our Mother ‘, said he regretted his last conversation with his mother. He explained that he was desperate to end his phone call so that he could go out and play out. Harry said: “Really, I can’t remember what I’m saying. But the only thing I remember is probably, you know, for the rest of my life, he regrets how short it is.
William also announced his personal thoughts in the documentary. He said: “I only remember that I feel completely numb, lost its direction, dizzy. You feel very, very complicated. And to yourself, ‘Why me?’ Always, why did I do?
Harry was also reflected in Diana’s funeral, which took place a few days later. He said: “My mother had just died and I had to walk a long way behind her coffin, thousands of people surround me on television while watching millions of more. No child should be asked to do it under any circumstances. I don’t think it will be today.”
William added: “There is no such thing in the world. Not really. As if an earthquake has passed only from home and your life and everything. Your mind is completely divided. And it really took some time for me.”
The documentary was one of the two people assigned by Prince William and Prince Harry to celebrate the 20th anniversary of his mother’s death.
In his memoirs, Harry also explains that his late mother has recreated the journey from the Paris tunnel of the deadly car accident.
Harry writes that he was invited to the French capital to participate in the 2007 Rugby World Cup semifinals and a driver was provided.
He remembered: “I have always dreamed of the tunnel as a treacherous passage, it was a dangerous, but just a short, simple, frustrated tunnel, Har Harry says,” No one has to die in. “
He also wrote: “I thought that the tunnel would put an end to pain, the ruthless pain or cause a short stance. Instead, the pain brought the beginning of Deux.”




