The Princess of Wales has marked her 44th birthday with a profoundly moving and intimate video, reflecting on fear, healing and rediscovering life after her cancer battle.
Released by Kensington Palace, the film is the final chapter of the Princess’s year-long Mother Nature series, titled Winter. The footage shows Catherine on an early-morning walk near her Berkshire home, accompanied by a gentle voiceover in which she opens up about her emotional journey over the past two years.

An aide described the release as the culmination of a deeply personal creative project, one that highlights humanity’s enduring bond with nature and its unique ability to help us heal and grow in mind, body and spirit.
In her narration, Catherine speaks candidly about the “fears” and “tears” she experienced during treatment, while also expressing gratitude for what the experience taught her. She reflects that even in winter’s coldest, darkest moments, the season offers stillness and patience — space to slow down, look inward and truly see ourselves.

She says that winter allows the stream to slow just enough for us to glimpse our own reflection, to discover the deepest parts of who we are, and to listen to the quiet pulse of life around us. Through that reflection, she admits, she has come to realise just how deeply grateful she is.
The Princess continues that when the rivers within us begin to flow freely, fear can be washed away. In accepting tears rather than resisting them, she says, we can come to peace — and in doing so, discover what it truly means to be alive. Nature, she adds, becomes a quiet teacher and a soft guide, helping us heal through memory and presence.

Alongside the video, Catherine shared a personally written caption explaining that the Mother Nature series has been a deeply personal creative reflection on how nature supported her healing, while also offering a wider message about creativity and collective recovery. She wrote that there is much humanity can learn from nature as we try to build a happier, healthier world.
The release comes after a challenging few years for the Princess. Following major abdominal surgery in January 2024, doctors discovered cancer and she underwent a gruelling course of preventative chemotherapy. She publicly revealed her diagnosis in March of that year, later announcing in September that she had completed treatment, while warning that her return to public duties would be gradual. In January last year, she shared the uplifting news that she was in remission, again asking for patience as she carefully resumed royal life.

Kensington Palace said the Mother Nature series, launched with its Spring episode during Mental Health Awareness Week, reflects the beauty and complexity of the human experience and the importance of reconnecting with ourselves, each other and the natural world. The final film was produced by Will Warr, with footage captured across Berkshire, Cumbria, Gloucestershire, London, East Sussex and the Cotswolds.
Looking ahead, aides say the Princess is eager to explore how nature and creativity can further support human connection, wellbeing and healing — themes that will remain central to her work in the years to come.