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Wombat & Squeak

@duchesskatemidd / duchesskatemidd.tumblr.com

"WILLIAM, HOW MUCH DO YOU LOVE ME?" Student/I'm a Cambridge family lover.
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The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge leave McLaren Automotive Composites Technology Centre on November 14, 2018 in Rotherham, England.

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I think I get even more excited about these two when I see Wills *heart eyes* this hard over his wife 😍 HE IS SO CUTE!!!! 

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The happiest of birthday photographs issued by @ClarenceHouse to mark Prince Charles’s 70th tomorrow. Fantastic images by @ChrisJack_Getty of the Prince, his sons, daughters-in-law and 3 grandchildren (plus 1 yet to make a appearance!) - taken in September at CH #PrinceCharles70

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Prince William, Duke of Cambridge talks with a solider after the Last Post Ceremony at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial in Ypres, Belgium. Then introduces his wife, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. | 30 July 2017
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“As I arrive for work at East Anglian Air Ambulance this evening, my last shift with this incredible team, I wanted to say thank you to my colleagues, team mates and the people of East Anglia who I have been so proud to serve.

Over the past two years I have met people from across the region who were in the most desperate of circumstances. As part of the team, I have been invited into people’s homes to share moments of extreme emotion, from relief that we have given someone a fighting chance, to profound grief.

I have watched as incredibly skilled doctors and paramedics have saved people’s lives. These experiences have instilled in me a profound respect for the men and women who serve in our emergency services, which I hope to continue to champion even as I leave the profession. I am hugely grateful for having had this experience.

From the moment I joined, when that phone rang at the base for the first time, it was clear that I was a fellow professional, a pilot with a job to do – in such a team there can be no other option, but still I am grateful to my colleagues for accepting me so readily.

At EAAA, our helicopters are airborne within four minutes of getting a call and can reach patients anywhere in the region within 25 minutes.

We land in residential gardens, school playing fields, beaches, roadsides, anywhere it is safe to do so. As a pilot, my job is to get the medical team to the patient as quickly and safely as possible, so they can give treatment as soon as possible after injury.

We are sent to only one per cent of ambulance call outs, where having a trauma team and getting the hospital to the patient quickly, can mean the difference between life and death.

I have watched our medical team perform surgery on a patient within minutes of jumping off the helicopter – their level of skill is astounding.

As a pilot at the scene, we will sometimes try and help by co-ordinating the area around the medical team, carrying their kit and doing whatever it takes to ensure they can focus on their work.

It is a joint effort, and everyone plays his or her role with great professionalism and dedication.

As a team, we travel to some very daunting incidents and we have been through some incredibly tough times together, witnessing some appalling tragedies.

One of the first call outs I made was to a young man who had taken his own life; it was an incredibly tough day and had a profound effect on all of us, not least in my determination now to draw attention to this issue.

Another rescue that sticks in my mind was to a young man who was involved in a road accident. His uncle in the car with him sadly didn’t survive, and I was sure that from what we were faced with he wouldn’t either – but thanks to the skills of our medical team he is alive today.

We were first on scene and in such circumstances we all had to pitch in to fight to save the young man’s life. It is days like this, when you know you have made a difference, that give you the determination to keep going.

I have seen at first-hand how our doctors, paramedics, police, fire and emergency services teams work together with such skill and professionalism in stressful situations.

I have also been very fortunate to work with an organisation which recognises the stress its staff deals with and puts their welfare as such a high priority.

You need to be physically and mentally fit to do this job properly and so we are encouraged to talk through the things we have seen, to share the trauma within the team.

I now know though that there are things that cannot be unseen and experiences that our first responders deal with on a daily basis that they will carry with them for life.

I have the utmost respect for the job that our emergency services carry out, without fuss, on a daily basis.

Having had the great good fortune to experience serving the East Anglian Air Ambulance, I would like to finally say thank you to the community who fund, support and keep the air ambulance flying.

As I hang up my flight suit, I am proud to have served with such an incredible team of people, who save lives across the region every day.”

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The big memory I have will be the very first day he arrived. He was meant to call in for just ten minutes but he ended up staying for about four hours, which was a good sign that he was comfortable amongst the team.

Captain Dave Kelly (via mr-mrswales)

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belgianeyes
There was one moment that kept replaying in my head as I walked away from Kensington Palace.
It was when director Ashley Gething asked William about his last conversation with his mother: “Do you remember what she said?”
The prince replied: “I do.”
And that was it.
Their desire to preserve her memory publicly has inspired openness not seen before.
But there is still much about their mother William and Harry will always keep for themselves.
And that’s exactly as it should be.
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