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For a man who demands his privacy, it was an extraordinary soul-bearing 90-minute public therapy session.<br> sat down with controversial ‘trauma therapist’ Gabor Maté for a £17 livestreamed chat last night and poured his heart out about topics ranging from his ‘positive’ experience of psychedelic drugs to how wife ‘saved’ him.<br>Sitting in front of a roaring fire at his £12 million home in Montecito, , Harry at one point joked about how ‘great’ the free therapy session was as he yet again complained about how he felt ‘different’ from the rest of his family and now bombards his own children with the love he feels he never received from his own father King Charles.<br>His choice of inquisitor was controversial as Dr Maté has been roundly criticised for advocating the use of psychedelic drugs including the South American drug ayahuasca, which makes users vomit.<br>The Duke of Sussex cheerfully described taking the hallucinogen, saying it ‘changed me’ and describing it as ‘cleaning the windscreen’ of his troubled mind.
Harry, 38, also appeared to advocate for illegal drugs, at one point saying: ‘Marijuana really did help me.'<br> Prince Harry sat down with controversial ‘trauma therapist’ Gabor Maté for a £17 livestreamed chat last night and poured his heart out<br> His choice of inquisitor was controversial as Dr Maté (pictured) has been roundly criticised for advocating the use of psychedelic drugs including the South American drug ayahuasca, which makes users vomit<br> Sitting in front of a roaring fire at his £12 million home in Montecito, California, Harry at one point joked about how ‘great’ the free therapy session was<br>While the ‘old’ Harry has long been fading from sight, yesterday’s event, entitled Living With Loss And Personal Healing, blasted that person into oblivion. Often sliding into Californian ‘therapy speak’ the Prince opened up about his ‘broken home upbringing’ and talked about his ongoing quest to find his ‘authentic true self’.<br>In one of the more jaw-dropping moments he talked about his military service saying he was a good candidate for the Army ‘because they recruit from broken homes’.<br>When Dr Maté said he disagreed with the war in Afghanistan, the Duke veered into politics saying many British soldiers were ‘not necessarily supportive’ of the military effort, saying: ‘Once you sign up, you do what you’re told to do.<br>‘So there was a lot of us that didn’t necessarily agree or disagree, but you were doing what you were trained to do, you were doing what you were sent to do.'<br>When asked if he ‘wallowed’ in victimhood, Harry smiled and said: ‘I definitely don’t see myself as a victim.'<br>Many of the themes were familiar topics from the endless interviews he has given to promote his memoir, a copy of which was included in last night’s price for the event.
Recalling his childhood, Harry called himself ‘a boy in a bubble’ saying: ‘I am still unclear to this day whether it was one bubble or multiple bubbles… My own self was distorted and perhaps because of my environment I was confined in but also because of society.
What it does to you, is almost like box[ing] you in.’ The topic then turned to his love of therapy with the Duke saying: ‘When I found my therapist and started to unpack 12-year-old Harry at the point my mother died, it was scary. I thought that when I went to therapy, it would cure me, and that I would lose whatever I had left of my mother [but] it was the opposite.<br>‘I turned what I thought was supposed to be sadness to try to 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.’ However he said that as he ‘learned a new language of therapy’, he found that ‘my family didn’t speak that language.’ Elaborating on his use of ayahuasca he said it ‘brought me a sense of relaxation, release, comfort, a lightness that I managed to hold on to for a period of time’.<br>But he said: ‘The moment I’m back in the chaos it kind of dissipates.
I started doing it recreationally and then started to realise how good it was for me. I would say it was one of the fundamental parts of my life that changed me and helped me deal with the traumas and the pains of the past.’ He added that ‘marijuana really did help me’ but cocaine ‘did nothing’ except make him feel part of a group.<br> The Duke of Sussex cheerfully described taking the hallucinogen, saying it ‘changed me’ and describing it as ‘cleaning the windscreen’ of his troubled mind<br> When asked if he ‘wallowed’ in victimhood, Harry smiled and said: ‘I definitely don’t see myself as a victim.'<br>slot gacor stop by our web page.
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