Duchess of York - Fairy-Tale Dreams
By Linda Sivertsen
It was 1986, and while Sarah Ferguson was marrying the
Second Son of the Monarch, I had also found my fairytale
prince. And, he was an English Lord to boot. September
26th was my big day. I had waited my whole life for this
moment. But I was stuck. I had huge cystic boils on my
face, and was hiding in an upstairs bathroom in a 1,000-year-old
castle, hurriedly attempting to conceal them with massive
doses of cover-up. The Duke and Duchess and other titled
relations were downstairs eyeing their watches, waiting
for me to appear for my "coming out" day-my introduction
to family, friends, society and the media, as the Lord's
mystery-woman fiancé. As the patriarch yelled for
me to "hurry along now," my violently shaking
hands kept dropping my one saving grace-the bottle of foundation-spilling
flesh-colored slop all over the Victorian porcelain sink
and porous stone floor. I was about to become the biggest
embarrassment to befall this perfectly groomed family in
centuries.
My lovable Lord's disappointment in me would be devastating,
and I would be summarily shown the servant's exit, whisked
out of the fairytale forever. As my frumpy Laura-Ashley
wanna-be dress billowed at the seams, my hair turned to
a ball of frizz (due to the thick blanket of fog surrounding
the castle), and the boils on my face throbbed and oozed.
Then I woke up!!!
Thank God!
I had that recurring nightmare because I was attending
USC with a British Lord, whose upper-crust accent and milky-white
complexion had me spellbound in the land of sunburned valley
boys. Problem was, he had a girlfriend back in England
and I had a boyfriend, so I wouldn't allow myself to think
much about a future with this Englishman during the day.
It was too new, too forbidden, and too outrageous to contemplate.
During sleep, however, my subconscious mind ran amok with
the possibilities. Think "Sweet, fragile friendship
blossoming beautifully in sunny Southern California " meets "King
Henry the Eighth with a guillotine."
When I got this coveted interview with the Duchess of
York, I thought, "Holy Crumpets! I wonder if she lived
my nightmare?! I can't wait to ask her!"
It seems that I wasn't the only one feeling like the wrong
person in the wrong place at the wrong time. Who knew that
the recently crowned Duchess of York (a media darling,
dubbed "a breath of fresh air" by a grateful
populace beginning to question the happily-ever-after union
of Prince Charles and Princess Diana) was feeling emotional
boils of her own? While I would wake up from my nightmares
awash in self-loathing, feeling that I was dying a slow
death attempting to be someone I wasn't, my simple life
would catapult me back to reality. Sarah's fairytale/nightmare,
however, was the Real Deal. I never would have guessed
that she was sleeping alone in a palatial apartment in
Buckingham Palace 320 days a year while her prince was
away at sea with the Royal Navy. I, like most people, was
oblivious to the restrictive formality of royal life, where,
rather than being able to feast on around-the-clock buffets
as one would imagine (can't you just see the footmen/ladies-in-waiting
peeling grapes for the Duchess?), all meals had to be ordered
the night before, sent from a kitchen miles away. The fact
that Sarah didn't so much as have a teakettle with which
to serve herself from her lofty perch was unimaginable.
The Duchess did, however, have a heck of a view! But to
preserve the look of perfection for this most prestigious
of tourist attractions, she wasn't allowed to open her
palace windows or blinds. Adhering to the low-wattage light
bulb rules didn't exactly add cheer to her mood. It might
have been easier to read outside during twilight, except
for the fact that the garden was a good ten-minute walk
away, and she didn't have time in her formal "meet-everyone-and-greet-even-more" schedule
to even think about reading or going outside.
When Sarah allowed herself to think about it, her reality
didn't fit "the" image. She felt fat, nervous,
and paranoid-waiting for the other shoe to drop, wondering
when the media would find out how wrong they were. "I
was unsuitable," she writes in her autobiography, My
Story . "I had been an anonymous working girl,
hard-pressed to pay her rent, dodging summonses for traffic
tickets. And then, with fictional suddenness, I was catapulted
into royalty-to be the object of cheers and curtseys, the
toast of state dinners." But, she hadn't just married
a prince. She had wed an institution. A package deal, in
which one didn't come without the other. While I was grateful
that my dreams had warned me that I could never hope to
fit into this noble lifestyle (a fly in the most sacred
of ointments), and resolved to stifle any feelings of romantic
love for my dear Lord friend immediately-post haste! (marrying
a raucous ex-stuntman who thought dressing up was cowboy
boots and t-shirts.yee haw!), the Duchess didn't get off
so easy. This fellow-insecure-tomboy-sister-in-frizz couldn't
exactly say, "Oops, I'm not who you think I am and
this isn't what I thought it would be" to a hopeful
country and darling new husband, at least not for another
six years. Instead, she waited eagerly for her man to return,
practiced her wave, slipped her blazing red tresses under
frilly, floppy and frivolous hats, and placed her upper
lip in the, "I'll smile through whatever you throw
at me," position. Well, you know how that one turned
out.
Fergie would wake from her dream, all right. But not until
she dressed for and traveled to thousands of official engagements;
gave birth to two princesses; developed a nearly devotional
passion for eggs, sausages and the kind of white bread
that sticks to your hips tighter than the telephoto lens
of the stalking paparazzi (can you blame her?), and ultimately
left the man she still loved before becoming the spokesperson
for Weight Watchers-her saving grace-and finding emotional
liberty in the land of the freewheeling and casual. Women
around the world relate to her mythical journey-the theme
of which is everywhere from animated movies to classical
literature-because when a gal goes from having no voice,
to having a huge voice; having few choices, to making bold
and powerful choices, we're drawn in. Isn't that what we're
all trying to do-kick a little ass, call our own shots,
and look hot in skin-tight pants as well?
Speaking of.since we've just finished the holidays and
it's nearly Valentine's Day, what I really wanted to ask
the Duchess was how, after authoring five books related
to eating, dieting and health, she might advise us to put
the brakes on the overindulgent habits we Americans are
so famous for? In other words: How do I keep my binging
fingers out of the chocolate box?
Thoughts on Binging
"You have to understand
that healthy eating is a commitment," she told me. "But,
we're not really talking about food, are we? If you're in
a binging mood, you've got to pull yourself up and be strong
with yourself and say, 'Why am I doing this? What is making
me binge to such a degree that I am going to sabotage my
figure-the
way I look?' What is the point? You don't need it. You're
not hungry. You're just eating because it's there, because
it tastes good and because you're avoiding your pain. So
taste it. And then have enough self-discipline to stop
for yourself, because your self's not going to do it.
"Hmm. Easy for her to say; she's got this discipline
thing mastered. But, the Duchess has made an interesting
point..."Your self is not going to do it." As
one who has spent too many parties parked next to the snack
table, I am all-ears. "That's good, isn't it?" she
says as she hears my mind whirling. "I just thought
that out. But it's true. Who's going to fight for you if
you don't fight for yourself? Your self can't do it because
it is stuck inside of you!" Critics could say that
the Duchess and I are talking gibberish, but I'm thinking
this is brilliant, and decide that one of these days (probably
not today, as we have ice-cream cake in the freezer), I'm
going to start being stronger for myself around sweets.
The Writing Duchess
Sarah is a prolific
writer, penning a slue of non-food related books as well:
two on the life and travels of Queen Victoria; a historical
book on Westminster; eight children's books, four based on
Budgie the helicopter (now a TV program); the aforementioned
autobiography, a coffee-table book of her photographs paired
with inspirational quotes; a fantastic self-help book called
"What
I Know Now: Simple Lessons Learned the Hard Way" (Simon & Schuster,
2003), and the latest children's book:
"Little
Red" (Simon & Schuster, 2003), a darling
tale that my son adores. Sarah made up this one while tucking
Beatrice and Eugenie into bed. I asked how she remembered
these bedtime stories (soon a series); after my head hits
the pillow, my stories are mostly gone. Poof. "Oh,
I didn't remember them either," she laughed, "but
my girls remembered everything!"
A Balance
of Extremes
I couldn't wait to
ask the Duchess how her definition of balance has changed.
(Let's face it, few of us have juggled over 320 engagements
in a year, as she did in '89.) "My
schedule is certainly easier nowadays," she began, "but
it goes deeper than schedules. I was definitely unbalanced,
but primarily because I was a people pleaser to such a
degree that I lost myself in another identity. I lost myself
in the ego, in trying too hard to attain the perfection
I lived with. I was riddled with anxiety and fears like:
'Oh my God I'm going to get it wrong. They're not going
to like me. I'm going to make a mistake. I smell. I have
bad breath. My hair's dirty. They're going to judge me
because my bottom's too big.' Add any more complexes you
can think of, and that's how unbalanced I was. "
I know your career keeps you very busy, I said, but when
you compare your schedule of the late eighties to now,
do you feel like you're living a holiday? "Yes! Everyday
I'm on a holiday," she answered. "I have to tell
you, if I wake up with an awful feeling, I ask myself,
'Which person is talking? Is this really Sarah, or is this
my ego talking?' I look at myself and see that it's always
my silly old fear. It's not real. At that point, I just
decide to clear my fear and go on with my day. My schedule
is much freer, of course, but if you're not free within
your heart and soul, it doesn't matter where you are. You
can literally be on vacation and still feel the same restrictions. "
The way the "old Duchess" chose to look at her
situation, therefore, added to her sense of chaos. Help
from her friends at Weight Watchers changed all that. Thanks
to the mental, emotional, physical and financial benefits
that have come from her eight-year-partnership with this
benevolent company, Sarah feels transformed. "My relationship
with these people has brought great friendship and kindness
into my life," she explains. Not to mention, tools. "I
can't stress it enough; they have literally held my hands
all the way through the healing of my issues with food. "
Fergie has had another source of support in her self-esteem-building
arsenal-a brutally honest woman who helps her to "get
real and stay real. "There's a lady I speak with on
the telephone," she said. "She makes me look
at myself. When she says, 'How are you, Sarah?' if I answer
with the faintest tint of phoniness, she catches it. 'Yeah,
sure you are. Why don't you call me back when you're going
to tell me the truth?' I don't know what you'd call her.
She's my own personal spiritual guru, really, and I like
how she makes me accountable." Sarah relayed a humorous
play-by-play of their conversations-choppy comments and
counter-comments in which Sarah denies being upset and
the coach refuses to budge: "You see! Look! I'm making
you angry," says the guru. "Well of course you're
making me angry," Sarah replies, "'You're saying
that I'm not fine when I am.' Eventually I get so angry,
I burst into tears." "'You see, thank you very
much!' the guru gloats. At that point, I figure out that
she's right and I tell her the truth, but I have to give
her about half an hour of trouble first. "
Knowing that Sarah's daughters are now teenagers, I asked
how she juggles her career with the countless commitments
of mothering teens. "Oh, they're at boarding school!" she
said, as if that idea was just as new to her as to me. "They
just started three weeks ago! It's really strange to suddenly
go from school runs and being so busy with them, to getting
my own life back. I have to be honest, it's quite nice."
Public Opinion
As our time together was
drawing to a close, I racked my brain trying to figure out
what this woman who's learned so much could help readers
with most. My research told me that she still has one of
the happiest divorces on record, that she and the Queen remain
friends, and that she harbors no ill-will toward the media
for past slights. I did, however, wonder what she has learned
about the opinions of others, having gone from being one
of the most popular women in the world to being treated as
a pariah? "These two
extremes," she said, "taught me to never make
a judgment about anybody. You can't. You have no right!
And, you have no idea what that person may be going through.
Just leave them be."
It's easy to witness the royals' pomp and circumstance
and believe they live in the lap of ease and luxury 24/7,
but the truth can be brutal; they spend an inordinate amount
of time in hospitals, administering to the poor in third-world
countries, and meeting countless people in dire situations
at home. "The royals need to balance, too, you see?" she
said. "Everything needs balance. I used to be able
to fight more for others than myself, and would lose myself
in charity. While I love charity work, I've learned how
to give without needing to be a savior. It is fine to build
hospitals for children, but that's still not really being
Sarah. True royalty is compassion of heart. I do have compassion
of heart, even if I'm just sitting at home being a mom."
Analyze This!
Sarah has written that she
no longer lives an unexamined life, and I wondered if she
ever runs into the trap of over examination? "Oh yeah!" she
said. "Then
you become a bore because everywhere you go, you over analyze
people's feelings and emotions. 'Why did they say that?
Why did they do that?' After a bit, you realize you're
doing it and balance that out, too. (That theme again!)
You've got to practice on people; when they tell you you're
being a 'guru head,' you come back to earth. It's very
difficult learning new tricks without practicing. I've
just started being myself, and I quite like the feisty,
rather strong, mouthy person I've become, but maybe I'll
balance her a bit better in the future as well. "
With that bit of wisdom (and some heartfelt goodbyes),
the Duchess was off. Cheerio.
In case you were wondering what became of that English
Lord, don't cry for him, Argentina , er, Britain . Before
I had the chance to heed my dream's lesson and head for
the hills, he dumped me like a hot-crossed bun for a woman
with no pores or frizz. But guess what? Despite her wealthy,
socialite background, it still took her years to feel at
home in his world!
As for Fergie, it's a good thing that she didn't have
any such warnings. This is one fairytale that needed to
happen-ironically, for the health of the Monarchy. If you
think about it, the very thing that worried the establishment
the most-that the back-to-back wallop of Di and Fergie
would bring down the House of Windsor-was its saving grace.
Not only are their children the literal future, but the
tireless work and captivating personalities of these wild
wives added human hearts and faces to a once far-removed
group. Besides, we all have conflicting parts of our lives
that need reconciling. Whether we're in over our heads,
feeling unprepared and sacrificing our personal needs (sounds
like parenting); dreaming of being swept off our feet only
to wake up with loads of compromise (sounds like marriage),
or thinking that life is supposed to be easy, only to have
plenty to answer to (sounds like making a living), every
time we see the Duchess conquer her demons, we know we
can as well. As she becomes the right person at the right
time in her life, it hits us that maybe, just maybe, we
really are living like true royalty after all.
Linda Sivertsen—West Coast Feature Editor
linda@balancemagazine.com
© 2004 Balance Magazine