If the biography of the relationship between Charles III and Elizabeth II, signed by Ingrid Seward and published on Thursday, February 15, is to be believed, the sovereign will use an interesting device while sleeping.
Imagine a transparent canvas on which a metal frame is placed, which covers the chest and head of the sleeping owner while injecting oxygen. This is the interesting device that King Charles III would have used during his sleeping hours. In his biography My mother and me (translate, Me and my mother), published on Thursday February 15 and dedicated to the relationship between Elizabeth II and her son Ingrid Seward, reveals that the sovereign used an oxygen tent for several years. A device that would allow him to combat his sinus problems, but would raise his mother’s incomprehension.
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“never lie down”
“The Queen has never understood Charles’ lavish lifestyle and found it quite disturbing as he is not a selfish person. But the fact that all his life he had seen that the ascension to the throne was delayed often prevented him from paying attention to others,” writes the royal correspondent. Before adding: “He never sympathizes when people have minor ailments and fights his own sinus problems by sleeping in an oxygen tent. For him, being tired or waking up are not acceptable excuses for missing even an hour of work, and he will never sleep in on a Sunday, even if he doesn’t feel well.” The invested monarch, who was however forced to step down from official duties following the announcement of his cancer on 5 February.
Source: Le Figaro
