WreathOfLaurels
Courtier
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- Jun 10, 2016
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- 593
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- New Zealand
Agreed. Recall my mother telling the 10 year old me off for criticising Charles's parenting, but that is how it looked at the time.
I think they boht tried. I dotnt think that Chas was a heartless so and so and I don't think that Di was a monster of selfishness. They did care for each other, she is a very child like hero worshipping way.. and he in a "i don't love her as much as Cam but she's a sweet girl" way. I think he tried to help her get intot royal life.. he took her on sunny holidays.. He played with the kids.. And she tried ot put up with Balmoral and shooting and polo.I am not saying this to start a fight, but I am just speculating. I think at the if Diana had just went along and participated in Charles's interests and been a little more submissive to the royal life, if what they had would have turned into love over time. It was a really nice life she married into. But, then both of them were immature and I don't know if either of them could have put the other first.
I tried ot find this bit about Cam trying to patch up her marriage with Andrew, in Tina B today, now I didn't read everything but I couldn't find it in the most obvious places.No, Brown does quote someone I think, I can't find the page number but it seems to ring true for me. Read the Brandeth book, it's much better than it sounds
I don't think it is absurd. OK the queen is a lot older than Di, but I think that with her frist 2 children she wasn't the most affectionate mother. Some of it was to do with her class and time, yes, but I think that perhaps it was only when she was older, with Andrew and Ed that she felt able to be a more relaxed mother. I get the feeling that she thought Di was over doting, and there is a story that one day whn Di was looking after the boys because it was Nanny's day off, she said "I don't know why Diana has to do this, there are plenty of housemaids". I think that she is of the age that saw nanny as the chief care giver... and I think there was a lot fo friction between Chas and botht parents. Of course they've moved past it.. They are basically good people and old enough to learn to get over things..but back in the 80s I think it was still bothering Charles that his parents had not been very affectionate to him..
I was watching some footage of Di and C with the children last night and yes it is obvious that Charles loves the boys, but not I think the way that Diana did. Her heart was bound up with those boys...and I think that C has only gotten really close to them since Diana died. I think that when his marriage got bad, he was away more and left the kids to Diana..
Of course he loves them and hes a more affectionate father than Phil was to him.. but I think that Diana lived for them.. and I don't think whatever her faults, that being a very very loving mother would do them any harm. I'm sure they had their times of being upset by her behaviour because she was angry and unhappy, but they knew she always loved htem and I think that it was easy to forgive her..
When Diana accused Charles and the rest of the RF of being cold and not into touching, her standards of such things were very demanding and the RF are not touchy feely people who wear their hears on their sleeves - some people are just like that through temperament.
I think it really comes down to selfless love, love that gives and doesn't take. My mother married at 18 and my father was 14 years older and yet they lived and loved and shared. Many were quite surprised at just how old my father was when he died! But, for them age was irrelevant, they were just any married couple. Happines is not promised to anyone but a choice to be made.I've always though an older man should never marry a teenager because they don't even know who they are yet. There's no way Charles could have known what Diana's interests were because Diana herself didn't know at that age.
i can see that it was probably tiring, for both C and his family, to have Diana looking for constant reassurance.. but she was young, naieve, and very very immature...There are people who just require a lot of positive reinforcement ..I think Diana was one of those. Not to mention she was very young and insecure. Not that confident. She probably needed that propping up/support more than anyone realized. She put on a good front perhaps and the family didn't realize she was struggling as much as she was, not at first anyway.
LaRae
And there's the crux of the issue. The Prince of Wales was 32 when he proposed to a 19 year old with stars in her eyes. Charles, knowing how he felt about Camilla, had absolutely no business proposing marriage to Diana or anyone else under any circumstances - not even with full disclosure of his love for Camilla. It was patently unfair to not only Diana, but to himself as well. That being said, there's more than enough blame to go around once the marriage was a reality; no one came out well.But it wasn't helped by Charles's being more deeply in love with Camilla
Catherine Meyer's bio of Charles makes the point of his emotional immaturity and just how emotionally febrile he was as well. Their similarities had as much to with the breakdown of the relationship as did their differences. Meyer also mentions the generation gap between the two (Charles was born in 1948 and Diana in 1961) as a factor as well.
WreathofLaurels, Thank you for mentioning about the generation gap. Diana was actually closer in age to her brothers-in-law, Andrew and Edward.
He did not have a choice. He had to get married fairly soon, and put aside his feeligns for Cam.And there's the crux of the issue. The Prince of Wales was 32 when he proposed to a 19 year old with stars in her eyes. Charles, knowing how he felt about Camilla, had absolutely no business proposing marriage to Diana or anyone else under any circumstances - not even with full disclosure of his love for Camilla. It was patently unfair to not only Diana, but to himself as well. That being said, there's more than enough blame to go around once the marriage was a reality; no one came out well.
Their similarities had as much to with the breakdown of the relationship as did their differences. Meyer also mentions the generation gap between the two (Charles was born in 1948 and Diana in 1961) as a factor as well.
The more we read and realize and talk about all the major differences between Charles and Diana and the different factors that played a huge role in the downfall of a "fairy tale" marriage, the more I'm realizing that so much heartache could have been avoided had these two people taken time for a longer courtship and engagement period and really had gotten to know each other, cemented a friendship or realized that they were just too different to really make a good partnership.
Its a real life example of "fools rush in where angels fear to tread" kind of thing.