Prince William said he found it very difficult to focus on school and normal life while opening his childhood sadness.
Prince of Wales, 42, visited this week to Child Bereavement UK – a charity for children's accuracy in Widnes, England, a sponsor.
The king spoke in the future about the loss of his mother, the late Princess Diana, at the age of fourteen. She died in a car accident in August 1997 at the age of 36 while photographers fled in Paris.
“Sometimes, the most difficult thing in sadness is to find words of what you are already feeling,” William said, according to the Daily Mail.
“It is important for those first few years, in particular, [that] You have support like this … it has made you in your practice, and how help yourself. “
“The mind focuses on one thing, right? It is very difficult to do school and normal life.”
William became a sponsor of the Children's Charitable Society – founded by his late mother's friend Julia Samuel – in 2009. His late mother was a sponsor until her sudden death.
William added: “What my mother got acquainted with at that time – and what I understand now – is that sadness is the most painful experience that any child or parents can carry.”
The Charitable Society, which is in its thirty year of service, is proud to support young people who suffer from sadness in their lives.
During his visit, William spoke with many teenagers who had the charity for support in previous years.
He knows exactly the position we were – he was in the same position on our time as well. “He really understood,” said Rebecca, 17, on the authority of the prince, according to the Times. “It seemed comfortable to be able to talk to us about things.”
Meanwhile, 18 -year -old Daniel said that the future king was “completely on the ground.”
“The Charitable Society is flourishing to collect donations and donations. You cannot provide support without them. You need people like the prince to raise awareness of what they are doing.”
Last year, William's separate brother, Prince Harry, opened his mother's loss.
With the tragedy call, Harry, who was 12 years old at the time, said that “things become easier” when children can talk about sadness.
Duke Sussex, 40, stressed the importance of allowing children to talk freely about their emotions.
“This is the most difficult thing, especially for children, I think, which is,” I do not want to talk about it because it will make me sad, but as soon as I realize whether I am talking about it, and I am celebrating their lives in reality, things become easier instead, ” I will not talk about that and this is the best form of confrontation, “in fact it is not.”
“It can be for a period of time. If you suppress this for a long time, you cannot suppress it forever, this is not sustainable and will eat you inside.”