Prince Harry Broke His Nose Several Times as Hes Bullied Quite a Lot When Playing Rugby at School

In a chat with Dr. Gabor Mate, the Duke of Sussex opens up on his unpleasant experience at school, claiming he ‘got picked on quite a lot’ when playing sports with his peers.

AceShowbizPrince Harry was left with a broken nose “a couple of times” when playing rugby at school while being bullied. While opening up about being hurt by his family’s alleged intimacy issues, the Duke of Sussex, 38, opened up about his trauma at Eton as part of his 90-minute livestreamed interview on Saturday, March 4 with so-called “toxic trauma” expert Dr. Gabor Mate, 79.

“I was a good candidate for the rugby team… I got picked on quite a lot, pushed into rugby posts and had my nose broken a couple of times,” Harry revealed when Dr. Mate described the prince as being “dangerous” on the rugby pitch as he wasn’t “afraid” of pain during their £19-per-ticket chat.

The royal also said he struggled to find his “authentic self” growing up, saying, “I felt slightly different to the rest of my family. I felt strange being in this container, and I know that my mum felt the same so it makes sense to me.”

He added he felt it was vital parents didn’t argue in front of their children, but said he can only “assume” he witnessed his dad King Charles and Diana embroiled in rows when he was a child. Harry said, “Do not have those disagreements, arguments, whatever it is…”

“Luckily my wife and I don’t have those. The idea of having those in front of the kids? I assume that my parents probably had a lot of those (rows) in front of me, maybe that’s where it comes from… that’s not a good idea.”

Dr. Mate diagnosed Harry with ADD during the chat, in which the duke added he “smothers” the two children he has with his 41-year-old wife Meghan – Archie, three, and 20-month-old Lilibet – to ensure they didn’t suffer his “traumas” when they grew up.

He added about initially finding it hard to find comfort in therapy after his mum’s 1997 car crash death, “I thought that if I went to therapy it would kill me and that I would lose whatever I had left, whatever I managed to hold onto of my mother and it turns out that wasn’t the case.”

“I didn’t lose that it was the opposite. I turned what I thought was supposed to be sadness to try and prove to her that I missed her into realising she just really wanted me to be happy, and that was a huge weight off my chest.”

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