The Royal Family’s aides are preparing for “two possibilities” in regards to Kate Middleton’s health. Earlier this year, in a rare update to the nation, Princess of Wales Kate said she experienced “good days and bad days” while going through chemotherapy.
Her return to the royal fold and public duty REMAINS up in the air despite public appearances at the BBC Wimbledon final back in July, as well as Trooping the Colour. Friends of the princess say her good and bad days “still rings true”, according to an analysis by The Times’ royal editor Roya Nikkah.
She continued to add that more “good days” could lead Kate to set her sights on a “potential” return to public life for the National Service of Remembrance on November 10. According to Nikkah, royal aides are also understood to be making separate preparations.
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Nikkah understands that Kate could alternatively make an appearance at the “Together at Christmas” carol service in Westminster Abbey. No date has been set for her return to public life, but the princess is understood to be holding more regular meetings as she works from home.
In an update ahead of Trooping, she said in a moving written message that she was making good progress but was “not out of the woods yet” and had “good days and bad days” as she continued her treatment. Speaking to GB News back in August, historian Simon Heffer claimed Princess Kate’s return to royal life gives people hope for a “bright future”.
Speaking to GB News, Heffer said: “She’s enormously popular. And the fact that she turned up at Wimbledon and Trooping the Colour, I think he’s reassured people that she’s not perhaps as ill as some of them feared. It’s quite clear that she’s being very ill and that her recovery is going to take some time. I think that it’s made people feel more confident that [the monarchy’s] got a bright future.
“And everybody wishes her a rapid and complete recovery. And it’s been good for morale to see that she can do these things now.”