“Why Won’t Mum Let Dad See Me?” — The Question Katie Price Spent 22 Years Praying She Would Never Hear

There are moments in parenting that knock the air out of a mother’s lungs.
For Katie Price, that moment arrived one quiet afternoon — a moment shaped not by cameras, headlines or controversy, but by the soft, honest voice of her son, Harvey, now 22.

He looked at her with the innocence that has defined him all his life and asked the question she feared since the day he was born:

“Why won’t Dad see me?”

A simple sentence.
A lifetime of pain behind it.


A Truth the Public Has Known — and Harvey Has Only Now Begun to Understand

Harvey’s father, former Premier League footballer Dwight Yorke, has been largely absent from his son’s life since Harvey was a baby.
Katie has spoken publicly — and painfully — for years about Yorke choosing not to stay involved after Harvey’s birth.

The nation has watched her raise Harvey alone:
hospital appointments, diagnoses, meltdowns, therapy sessions, late-night emergency calls, and the constant vigilance that comes with caring for a child who is autistic, partially blind, and has Prader–Willi syndrome.

The UK knows this story.
Katie knows this story.
But Harvey… never fully understood it.

Until now.

Harvey is blind, autistic, has septo-optic dysplasia, a learning disability and is one of the 2,000 people in the UK with Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic disorder

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Harvey is blind, autistic, has septo-optic dysplasia, a learning disability and is one of the 2,000 people in the UK with Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic disorder

Katie fell pregnant with Harvey following a brief romance with Dwight and welcomed her eldest son in 2002 (pictured in 2022)

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Katie fell pregnant with Harvey following a brief romance with Dwight and welcomed her eldest son in 2002 (pictured in 2022)


“How Do I Tell Him Without Breaking Him?”

A source close to Katie says she froze when Harvey asked — not out of anger, but out of heartbreak.

“She’s spent 22 years protecting him from rejection,” the source said.
“She never wanted him to feel unwanted. That’s her biggest fear as a mum.”

Katie has publicly said before:

“I’ve always said to Dwight: the door is open. It’s his choice.”

But choices have consequences — and eventually, children start noticing who shows up and who doesn’t.


Harvey, Growing Up, and the Question She Knew Would Come

For most of his life, Harvey accepted the world exactly as it was.
But now, as a young adult living in residential college, surrounded by friends who talk about their families, he is beginning to ask deeper questions.

Questions Katie cannot dodge forever.
Questions every mother raising a child alone dreads.

Because how do you explain to a child — even a grown one — that sometimes a parent chooses not to stay?
That the absence wasn’t his fault?
That love isn’t always enough to make someone step up?


A Mother Who Has Always Been Both Mum and Dad

Katie has long spoken about the loneliness of raising Harvey without support.
She has done every hospital visit, meeting, meltdown, and milestone alone.
She has fought for his education, for his rights, for his medical needs, and for his dignity.

For 22 years, she has been:

  • nurse

  • advocate

  • protector

  • teacher

  • full-time carer

  • and both parents in one

But she has never told Harvey the full story.
Not because she wanted to lie — but because she wanted to protect his heart.


“Mum is Here. Mum Has Always Been Here.”

When Harvey asked the question at last, Katie kept her answer simple — gentle — carefully wrapped in truth but not cruelty.

She told him:

“Mum has always been here for you, and Mum always will be.”

Then she explained, as softly as she could, that sometimes grown-ups don’t make the right choices — and that it had nothing to do with him.

Harvey accepted it.
Katie didn’t.

She cried after he went to bed — not because of Dwight Yorke, but because of the look in Harvey’s eyes.
A look every mother hopes never to see.


A Story Millions of Single Parents Understand

Katie’s situation is extreme — lived in the spotlight, scrutinised by tabloids, shaped by public opinion.
But the question at the heart of it is heartbreakingly common:

“Why doesn’t my dad want to see me?”

Across the UK, countless parents face the same impossible conversation.
And countless children carry the same invisible hurt.

Katie Price has been many things in the public eye — glamorous, controversial, outspoken — but behind all of it, she has been doing something much quieter, much harder:

Raising a son who has never once doubted her love, even when he begins to question someone else’s.