King Charles was at a turning point in his history when he came out for the first time to appear in a public setting following his cancer diagnosis disease in Windsor. He got off at the chapel with his wife, Queen Camilla, and amidst the crowds who had gathered wishing them luck, he smiled and waved to them.
However, turning up for the wedding was the opposite pair—or else the Prince and Princess would have been keeping bedside as Catherine continued her cancer treatment. Since his diagnosis, the Foot Print has shown that he works, but privately; the Easter morning church service then proved to be a sign of some positive steps being taken.
Although the fact that she has had the opportunity to present herself publicly shows that the support is offered by the medical team, according to sources, this is the first hesitant yet optimistic step back to public appearance. The monarch expressed his regret for his absence from the traditional Maundy Thursday service held earlier, and Queen Camilla has never been there to show the representative of the Royal Family.
The cancer of the king was identified during a check-up for an enlarged prostate in January. However, the exact type has not been revealed, but Buckingham Palace claims that it is not prostate cancer. The Royal family, with the King and Queen, gave up when they both battled with cancer, and they also reduced working the senior royals for some time.
The future parading outlook for significant events like the Trooping of the Colour in June of the royal family members is yet to be ascertained, and when the king reappears in public events still has an unknown timetable.