Muhler
Imperial Majesty
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2010
- Messages
- 17,405
- City
- Eastern Jutland
- Country
- Denmark
Part 3.
Gustav's childhood.
He turned 50 this month.
"My childhood at Berleburg was very intensive. I grew up in the house behind the manor (the building where Benedikte live today.)
I know exactly where I lived when I was very small and where I eventually ended up living, in the same room.
It was the same room for 30 years."
In 2005 he moved in at the main building.
"As a child I had my friends in Berleburg and they came here at the manor. (He went to the local school, under the name of Prinz Gustav BTW.) For the first part of my time in school I went to the local school about fifteen minutes from here. Initially we played inside the manor, but as we grew older we started playing soccer. My father wasn't happy about us playing in the park. We ruined not only the lawn but also the flowers. So we were allocated a lawn outside the park. That was our soccer field. It was so big. (As in great!) I clearly remember that."
His days in school, weeell...
"I was just an ordinary boy who just liked playing soccer. And as such I wasn't perhaps as focused on school as my father would have liked. Mathematics was absolutely not my strong side. But then I got a private tutor who taught me mathematics and then it fortunately went better.
I loved nature and being outside and soccer was back then the biggest thing for me.
When I was young they found out that I have muscular dystrophy. That put it's mark om my childhood.
I couldn't really understand why I couldn't walk, but my parents saw it, especially my father. That's why I was often at the hospital and I hated being committed. So when I was five and six I spend a lot of time at the hospital. I underwent surgery. Yes, I also had my tonsils removed. When I went to Denmark it was always because I had to go to the hospital. I didn't understand it."
His father was in despair and encouraged his son to do a lot of exercise on order to strengthen his muscles.
"Once in a while my father asked me: Gustav! Have you gone up and down the stairs? Have you been hopping on one leg?
And I hadn't. But fortunately he did with the best intentions.
But apart from running up and down the stairs, Gustav was also signed up for judo and taekwondo. He doesn't seemed to have enjoyed that, but in the summer he was at least allowed to play tennis.
"But all my friends played soccer and one day they took me along to practice. And then I discovered that this was something for me.
My father accepted that as long as I didn't neglect school.
If my grades were bad, he said with a twinkle in his eyes: If you don't improve in school, you won't be allowed to play soccer."
When he was 14 Gustav was send off to the boarding school, Louisenlund, not far from the Danish border. That became six years of his life that he loved.
"That was the best time of my life. With the ups and downs that followed. All you had to go through with love and if you did things that were forbidden. Louisenlund had it all.
That time is a big part of me and I often think back on that time. The years at the boarding school made who I am today. It has also shaped me. I also had friends in Berleburg, but the friends for life, those I found at Luisenlund."
Benedikte was also pleased with Louisenlund, because it was located near the route to Denmark.
"The area where the school is located was once Danish. For my mother it was fun to have me closer to Denmark. Because then she could just drive up to visit me or pick me up when we were going on vacation in Denmark. So that was practical.
Louisenlund was perfect and she was completely in agreement with me attending a boarding school. She had after all been to a boarding school herself. So she knew how it was."
But there was also focus on him, because he is a Prince. (And a Prinz.)
"Of course there was particular focus on me and my family. Not least because of my mother. That is... a Danish royal Princess. I wasn't that keen about it. Both when journalists and photographers came down to Berleburg, but often at the boarding school there was a photographer who stood there with his long lens. I couldn't run around freely and it was frightfully annoying.
When there was a shooting-party (a central European/German tradition) at Berleburg there came two or three photographers. I just wanted to be left alone with my friends and I couldn't.
I always had to behave and be dressed neatly. Back then I hated it. Now I have gotten used to it And now it's not a problem.
Gustav was from early childhood made aware that he was eventually to take over Schloss Berleburg and trained by his father in running such a huge estate.
Schloss Berleburg was build in the 1200's and it has been in possession of the family for more than 700 years.
No one really know how many square meters it is, but there are more than 60 rooms there. To Berleburg belongs, apart from the town, some 13.000 hectares of forest. So forestry constitute the main income of the manor.
Today Gustav is a man of 50.
"As someone very correctly said. It's but a number. I'm fine but I can tell that I have grown older. When I look at myself in the mirror I suddenly see that I have gotten grey hairs. And sometimes I wake up in the morning and feel so sore. Then you feel like an old man.
But I also feel like a young man, who can do it all. You can do everything so long as you feel fit.
I have a weakness for sweet things and I have to stop that. I have told myself that." - While looking longingly at the pastry served at the interview.
- The next post will contain the scans as well what Gustav has to say about his father, and the death of his father.
Gustav's childhood.
He turned 50 this month.
"My childhood at Berleburg was very intensive. I grew up in the house behind the manor (the building where Benedikte live today.)
I know exactly where I lived when I was very small and where I eventually ended up living, in the same room.
It was the same room for 30 years."
In 2005 he moved in at the main building.
"As a child I had my friends in Berleburg and they came here at the manor. (He went to the local school, under the name of Prinz Gustav BTW.) For the first part of my time in school I went to the local school about fifteen minutes from here. Initially we played inside the manor, but as we grew older we started playing soccer. My father wasn't happy about us playing in the park. We ruined not only the lawn but also the flowers. So we were allocated a lawn outside the park. That was our soccer field. It was so big. (As in great!) I clearly remember that."
His days in school, weeell...
"I was just an ordinary boy who just liked playing soccer. And as such I wasn't perhaps as focused on school as my father would have liked. Mathematics was absolutely not my strong side. But then I got a private tutor who taught me mathematics and then it fortunately went better.
I loved nature and being outside and soccer was back then the biggest thing for me.
When I was young they found out that I have muscular dystrophy. That put it's mark om my childhood.
I couldn't really understand why I couldn't walk, but my parents saw it, especially my father. That's why I was often at the hospital and I hated being committed. So when I was five and six I spend a lot of time at the hospital. I underwent surgery. Yes, I also had my tonsils removed. When I went to Denmark it was always because I had to go to the hospital. I didn't understand it."
His father was in despair and encouraged his son to do a lot of exercise on order to strengthen his muscles.
"Once in a while my father asked me: Gustav! Have you gone up and down the stairs? Have you been hopping on one leg?
And I hadn't. But fortunately he did with the best intentions.
But apart from running up and down the stairs, Gustav was also signed up for judo and taekwondo. He doesn't seemed to have enjoyed that, but in the summer he was at least allowed to play tennis.
"But all my friends played soccer and one day they took me along to practice. And then I discovered that this was something for me.
My father accepted that as long as I didn't neglect school.
If my grades were bad, he said with a twinkle in his eyes: If you don't improve in school, you won't be allowed to play soccer."
When he was 14 Gustav was send off to the boarding school, Louisenlund, not far from the Danish border. That became six years of his life that he loved.
"That was the best time of my life. With the ups and downs that followed. All you had to go through with love and if you did things that were forbidden. Louisenlund had it all.
That time is a big part of me and I often think back on that time. The years at the boarding school made who I am today. It has also shaped me. I also had friends in Berleburg, but the friends for life, those I found at Luisenlund."
Benedikte was also pleased with Louisenlund, because it was located near the route to Denmark.
"The area where the school is located was once Danish. For my mother it was fun to have me closer to Denmark. Because then she could just drive up to visit me or pick me up when we were going on vacation in Denmark. So that was practical.
Louisenlund was perfect and she was completely in agreement with me attending a boarding school. She had after all been to a boarding school herself. So she knew how it was."
But there was also focus on him, because he is a Prince. (And a Prinz.)
"Of course there was particular focus on me and my family. Not least because of my mother. That is... a Danish royal Princess. I wasn't that keen about it. Both when journalists and photographers came down to Berleburg, but often at the boarding school there was a photographer who stood there with his long lens. I couldn't run around freely and it was frightfully annoying.
When there was a shooting-party (a central European/German tradition) at Berleburg there came two or three photographers. I just wanted to be left alone with my friends and I couldn't.
I always had to behave and be dressed neatly. Back then I hated it. Now I have gotten used to it And now it's not a problem.
Gustav was from early childhood made aware that he was eventually to take over Schloss Berleburg and trained by his father in running such a huge estate.
Schloss Berleburg was build in the 1200's and it has been in possession of the family for more than 700 years.
No one really know how many square meters it is, but there are more than 60 rooms there. To Berleburg belongs, apart from the town, some 13.000 hectares of forest. So forestry constitute the main income of the manor.
Today Gustav is a man of 50.
"As someone very correctly said. It's but a number. I'm fine but I can tell that I have grown older. When I look at myself in the mirror I suddenly see that I have gotten grey hairs. And sometimes I wake up in the morning and feel so sore. Then you feel like an old man.
But I also feel like a young man, who can do it all. You can do everything so long as you feel fit.
I have a weakness for sweet things and I have to stop that. I have told myself that." - While looking longingly at the pastry served at the interview.
- The next post will contain the scans as well what Gustav has to say about his father, and the death of his father.