Prince Harry and Time 15 January 2023 By Kareem Abiodun Giwa
Royals are everywhere, unlike aristocracy. Anyone can claim royalty and not belong to the palace, the center of politics, diplomacy, and intrigue. Williams Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night' reveals the lack of perfection among aristocrats and foolery as an everyday staple just as it does commoners. Anyone can be an actor on the stage for a show like comedy to make people laugh in derision.
Prince Harry's presentation about his past in 'Spare' and his current struggle chronicles his involvement as a palace personality, loss, grief, betrayal, and bitterness. He seeks sympathy as a human being. Has he got it? The answer is, on the contrary, based on news reports.
Most people have asked about what he wants. "After all," they say, "he has everything that makes life comfortable." He has friends in high places, is rich, and lives in a mansion. All he has come from his life as a prince. Many people see him as fortunate but seek attention over little things.
And indeed, several lines in Spare remind readers about 'Trifles': a play by Susan Glaspell. He began in a big way and reduced the issue to trivial by talking about matters of everyday disagreement between him and his brother, father, and sister-in-law. He also spoke about his paternity in a way that he wanted to break off from his father when he talked about the severe issue. People ask about what he wants.
Outsiders view Harry as comfortable in terms of needs. He does not belong to the category of people whose condition is physiological or security under Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. However, his acts have placed him in the middle among people needing belonging and love when he is supposed to be among people with self-actualization. Is this why he says he wants to be with his father and brother in one of the interviews, making people wonder about what he wants, despite having kicked himself off his family and royal duties?
Is he now homesick or acting to show he still wants his father and brother? Some observers say Harry's behavior is like someone suffering from Post Trauma Stress Disorder, PTSD. Can isolation from his father, brother, and an institution that has been part of him from birth cause PTSD?
For example, he cited a case of mistreatment against his wife, Meghan, by Middleton over dresses for marriage to Meghan. It was inconvenient for Meghan. She had a problem with her paternal family. How do you blame another person for the cause of an inconvenience that began with coldness over her estrangement from her paternal family? Noting Meghan does not have good relations with her paternal family. Harris's relationship with his family and the palace in the doldrum.
'Spare' is about the evil allegedly meted out to him. He is the victim, an Angel incapable of wrong. He cuts the picture of Malvolio in the Twelfth Night, who felt he was wronged for not getting the love, unaware his affection for Olivia was misplaced and led to believe by Maria that Olivia fell in love with him. Curious observers say someone is wrongly pulling Harry in the direction he has found himself away from his family. He needs help. The palace and family must avoid reprisal actions.
He will get money from his book. But more than money is needed to solve problems. A time will come when he sits down and think about a solution. No family lives in isolation with paternal relations on both sides of the aisle without one day coming to the reality of the vacuum. He may need to prod Markle to resolve problems with her paternal family and use that as a foundation to begin to pull Markle for a reunion with the palace.
Remember Jimmy Cliff's song: Time Will Tell.
Prince Harry's presentation about his past in 'Spare' and his current struggle chronicles his involvement as a palace personality, loss, grief, betrayal, and bitterness. He seeks sympathy as a human being. Has he got it? The answer is, on the contrary, based on news reports.
Most people have asked about what he wants. "After all," they say, "he has everything that makes life comfortable." He has friends in high places, is rich, and lives in a mansion. All he has come from his life as a prince. Many people see him as fortunate but seek attention over little things.
And indeed, several lines in Spare remind readers about 'Trifles': a play by Susan Glaspell. He began in a big way and reduced the issue to trivial by talking about matters of everyday disagreement between him and his brother, father, and sister-in-law. He also spoke about his paternity in a way that he wanted to break off from his father when he talked about the severe issue. People ask about what he wants.
Outsiders view Harry as comfortable in terms of needs. He does not belong to the category of people whose condition is physiological or security under Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. However, his acts have placed him in the middle among people needing belonging and love when he is supposed to be among people with self-actualization. Is this why he says he wants to be with his father and brother in one of the interviews, making people wonder about what he wants, despite having kicked himself off his family and royal duties?
Is he now homesick or acting to show he still wants his father and brother? Some observers say Harry's behavior is like someone suffering from Post Trauma Stress Disorder, PTSD. Can isolation from his father, brother, and an institution that has been part of him from birth cause PTSD?
For example, he cited a case of mistreatment against his wife, Meghan, by Middleton over dresses for marriage to Meghan. It was inconvenient for Meghan. She had a problem with her paternal family. How do you blame another person for the cause of an inconvenience that began with coldness over her estrangement from her paternal family? Noting Meghan does not have good relations with her paternal family. Harris's relationship with his family and the palace in the doldrum.
'Spare' is about the evil allegedly meted out to him. He is the victim, an Angel incapable of wrong. He cuts the picture of Malvolio in the Twelfth Night, who felt he was wronged for not getting the love, unaware his affection for Olivia was misplaced and led to believe by Maria that Olivia fell in love with him. Curious observers say someone is wrongly pulling Harry in the direction he has found himself away from his family. He needs help. The palace and family must avoid reprisal actions.
He will get money from his book. But more than money is needed to solve problems. A time will come when he sits down and think about a solution. No family lives in isolation with paternal relations on both sides of the aisle without one day coming to the reality of the vacuum. He may need to prod Markle to resolve problems with her paternal family and use that as a foundation to begin to pull Markle for a reunion with the palace.
Remember Jimmy Cliff's song: Time Will Tell.