Prince Harry: What he wants to teach Archie and Lilibet about the meaning of life

Prince Harry
What he wants to teach Archie and Lilibet about the meaning of life

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Prince Harry is the proud father of two children. He wants to share with you an important lesson he learned during his time in the military.

Prince Harry, 37, grew up well protected behind the walls of the British royal palace, but the royal, who is now living with his wife Duchess Meghan, 40, and their two children Archie, 2, and Lilibet, ten months, in chic Montecito in California lives has definitely learned one or the other hard lesson for life.

Prince Harry on Finding “Your Purpose”

After all, the 37-year-old served in the British Army for ten years, rose to the rank of “Captain” and was even involved in two missions in Afghanistan. A formative time, from which he would like to pass something on to his children one day.

“That I’m grateful for every experience I’ve had in and out of my uniform,” he explains in an interview with “People”. “That I’ve learned how to truly serve others. That finding your purpose is one of the most gratifying experiences. And that hard work should be both fulfilling and rewarding.”

He was also stripped of his military title after stepping down as a senior royal in 2020. What remains are the impressions and experiences that the Duke of Sussex made during his time in the military.

Serious tones from the Duke of Sussex

In 2014 he created the Invictus Games, an international sporting event for wounded, injured and ill service members and veterans. Since then, Prince Harry has been keenly committed to his heart project, which he recently visited with Meghan in The Hague. He can hardly wait to take his children to the event, revealed the 37-year-old, who now experienced the games “more emotionally” as a father.

“When I was in the army, I swore to myself that I would retire before I had a wife and children because I could not imagine the pain of being separated for so long during a deployment, the risk that I could be hurt and that my family’s life could be changed forever if that happens,” the American-by-choice intoned seriously.

Sources used: people.com, dailymail.co.uk

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