Nothing was left for Meghan
Prince Harry consumed her laughing gas when Archie was born
Prince Harry has reported on the birth of Archie in his new book “Reserve”. He used laughing gas, which was actually intended for Duchess Meghan.
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Prince Harry took laughing gas when Archie was born.
Sarina BosshardEditor People
The birth of Archie (3) in May 2019 was extraordinary – but not only because he was the first child of Prince Harry (38) and Duchess Meghan (41). The Duke of Sussex caused a shake of the head with an action. Harry consumed his wife’s laughing gas, as reported by the “Daily Mail” on the basis of his memoirs “Reserve”.
In the book, Harry says Meghan was very calm while she was in labor at Portland Hospital in London. He was also calm. “But I saw two ways to improve my rest. First: Chicken from Nando’s (brought by our bodyguards). Second: A canister of nitrous oxide next to Meg’s bed.’ He opted for the latter. “I took several slow, penetrating hits,” writes Harry.
“Meg laughed and rolled her eyes”
Nitrous oxide is used in medicine to relieve and numb pain. However, nitrous oxide also induces a high where faint hallucinations and feelings of happiness are felt when inhaled. Harry’s wife took the situation with humor. ‘Meg, bouncing on a giant purple ball, a tried and tested way of giving nature a nudge, laughed and rolled her eyes. I took a few more hits and now I was bouncing, too,” Harry continues.
A nurse might have been less enthusiastic. Because when she wanted to give Meghan laughing gas her pain, there was none left. The nurse first looked at the empty tank and then looked at him. “I could see the thought slowly dawning on her. My God, the man got everything, »said Harry. He apologised.
He stayed away from nitrous oxide when Lilibet was born
The mood then changed abruptly when the doctors decided to give Meghan an epidural for her pain. ‘The anesthetist rushed in. The music stopped, the light went on. phew Change of mood.” Meghan had previously listened to soulful songs and Harry lit the room with electric candles. After last-minute concerns that the baby might become entangled in the umbilical cord, Archie was born unharmed. Harry and Meghan both cried. Later in the book, he tells of Lilibet’s (1) birth in June 2021 and quips: “This time I didn’t touch the nitrous oxide (because there was none).”
Prince Harry’s memoir “Reserve” will be released on Tuesday (January 10). But because they accidentally ended up in several bookstores in Spain, British media were able to secure copies in advance and publish spicy details.