Prince Harry explaining pregnancy to children is the sweetest thing you'll see all day

This is too much!

prince harry meghan markle

This is too much!

Ever since Prince Harry showed off his parenting skills, jokily scolding a little boy for pulling his wife’s hair and then catching two-year-old Emily Henson stealing his popcorn at last year’s Invictus Games, fans have been waiting for the 34-year-old Prince to become a father himself.

And now the time is here, with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle expecting a royal baby this Spring.

Since announcing the exciting news, the couple have voiced their happiness, with Meghan telling fans that they were excited to ‘join the parenting club’ while Prince Harry let slip a nickname for the future royal baby – ‘our little bump’.

A photo posted by on

Last week, a month before his baby’s due date the prince gave us a look at his parenting skills as he met a newborn baby, but it’s an interaction this week that has got everyone talking about the expectant father.

While visiting St. Vincent’s Catholic School in Acton this week, the prince reportedly crouched down to talk to some excited school children.

And while one little boy, Emmanuel Osei, had to take some convincing from Prince Harry that he was ‘the real Prince Harry’, it was the royal’s interaction afterwards that got everyone talking, as he could be seen describing pregnancy to a group of children.

Yes, in a now viral video, Prince Harry can be seen acting out a growing baby bump to a group of children, explaining about Meghan Markle and their future baby.

Like we needed proof that Prince Harry would make an incredible dad!

Jenny Proudfoot
Features Editor

Jenny Proudfoot is an award-winning journalist, specialising in lifestyle, culture, entertainment, international development and politics. She has worked at Marie Claire UK for seven years, rising from intern to Features Editor and is now the most published Marie Claire writer of all time. She was made a 30 under 30 award-winner last year and named a rising star in journalism by the Professional Publishers Association.