In a new mental-health documentary released on May 20, Prince Harry once again detonates a public bomb inside Buckingham Palace — delivering his harshest criticism yet of his father, King Charles III, while recounting the spiralling “nightmare years” that drove him to alcohol, panic attacks, and the edge of self-destruction.
For the Royal Family, the documentary is nothing short of an earthquake.
For Harry, it is the story he says no one inside the Palace ever allowed him to tell.
“My father caused me pain.”

The documentary revisits remarks Harry made in an earlier podcast, describing King Charles’s parenting as a pattern of “inherited pain,” but this time, the Duke escalates his accusations.
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He alleges that his father dismissed his emotional struggles, repeating a cold refrain from Harry’s childhood:
“My father used to tell William and me: ‘I dealt with this, so you’ll have to deal with it, too.’ It made no sense. If you suffered, you should want to stop your children suffering — not pass the pain down.”
The criticism is stark, personal, and unprecedented. Court aides, speaking anonymously, say the remarks left senior royals “deeply wounded,” but none have responded publicly.
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Harry describes the years following his mother’s death as a quiet implosion — one that intensified dramatically in his late twenties.
The documentary captures him speaking plainly about the crippling anxiety that haunted official duties:
- Sudden panic attacks
- Sweating uncontrollably before stepping outside
- Physical symptoms whenever cameras appeared
- Overwhelming dread during public engagements
“Every time I put on a suit and tie, I felt the panic building,” he recalls. “Before I even stepped out the door, I would be soaked in sweat.”
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He says the pressure of performing the role expected of him slowly consumed him:
“Every handshake, every crowd, every flash of a camera — it drained me completely.”
The tipping point came before he met Meghan, when he began to question whether he could remain in the Royal Family at all.
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The documentary devotes significant time to Harry’s childhood memories — moments he says still wake him in the night.
He describes being chased in the backseat of his mother’s car by paparazzi:
“My mother was crying. Motorbikes were surrounding us. There was no protection. None.”
It is one of the few moments in which Harry’s voice cracks on camera.
He also recalls the universally televised moment that shaped his life: walking behind Princess Diana’s coffin at age 12.
“I didn’t want the world watching my grief. I was angry. There was no justice for what happened to her.”
The documentary connects these childhood wounds directly to his later breakdown.
“I drank. I used drugs. Anything to make the pain stop.”
For the first time in detail, Harry describes the coping mechanisms he turned to in his twenties:
- Heavy drinking
- Substance use
- A desperate attempt to numb emotion rather than confront it
He admits he was “emotionally flattened,” unable to feel joy or sadness, giving only one answer when asked how he was doing:
“I always said I was fine. But mentally, I was collapsing.”
This all predates Meghan — a point the documentary underlines deliberately, as if to counter claims she was the cause of his estrangement from the monarchy.
Meghan’s Darkest Moment
Although much of the focus is on Harry’s trauma, the documentary also revisits Meghan’s previously revealed suicidal thoughts. Harry says the memory still haunts him, describing himself as “terrified” and “unprepared” to handle his wife’s breaking point.
Palace insiders have already pushed back, calling the narrative “deeply unfair,” but the documentary frames Meghan’s crisis as the catalyst for Harry’s determination to break from royal life.
A Damning Portrait of the Royal System

The larger message of the film is clear: Harry believes the monarchy is trapped in generational dysfunction.
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“The system isn’t built to help you,” he says.
“It preserves the institution — not the people.”
For many viewers, these are Harry’s most explicit words yet about the Royal Family’s alleged emotional neglect.
Longing for the Mother His Children Never Knew
The documentary ends on a quieter note, with Harry expressing heartbreak that his mother will never meet his family:
“I wish she could have met Meghan. I wish she could see Archie. It hurts every day.”
The sentiment is sincere — yet it leaves lingering tension. Critics argue Harry is exploiting Diana’s legacy to justify his choices; supporters insist he is finally speaking the truth the Palace has avoided for decades.
A Documentary That Leaves Scars
The fallout is immediate:
- Royal commentators call the series a “declaration of war.”
- Palace insiders describe “genuine shock” at Harry’s accusations.
- Social media erupts — divided, furious, emotionally charged.
Once again, Harry has stepped outside the royal script.
Once again, the monarchy is left scrambling — in silence.
And once again, the world is watching a family torn between duty, grief, and a son who refuses to stop telling his story.
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