Queen Elizabeth.Photo: Chris Jackson/Getty

Queen Elizabeth’s recent mobility issues limited her to appearances at just a few events over her four-day Platinum Jubilee celebration.
After appearing on the Buckingham Palace balcony for Trooping the Colour on Thursday, the palace announced that the monarch, 96, would not attend Friday’s service of thanksgiving in her honor. She lit the Platinum Jubilee beacons on Thursday night, then did not step out in person again until the grand finale on Sunday, when she ended the Platinum Jubilee Pageant with a surprise appearance alongside her family on the palace balcony again.
“The Queen greatly enjoyed today’s Birthday Parade and Flypast but didexperience some discomfort,” a spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said on Thursday.
Her own high expectations for herself are a factor in keeping the Queen from taking part, says royal historian Robert Lacey in this week’s issue of PEOPLE: “She would not want to stumble — not for her own sake but for the distress it would cause other people.”
Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth and Prince George.Chris Jackson - WPA Pool/Getty

A source told PEOPLE that the Queen’s episodic mobility issues flared during the course of the day on Thursday. She was pictured using her cane on the palace balcony as she took the salute and viewed the flypast alongside members of the royal family.
“Yes, she [the Queen] was fine, it was just very tiring yesterday,” Kate said,according to PA, adding that the monarch “had had a lovely, lovely time.”

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The Queen has been experiencing mobility issues in recent months and finds it difficult to stand for long periods. She has been using a walking cane and even complained about mobility problems, joking during an in-person meeting: “Well, as you can see, I can’t move!”
Although the monarch appeared on the palace balcony for Trooping the Colour, she didn’t take part in the main parade for the first time.
Bill Mott, a former Garrison Sergeant Major of London District who ran Trooping Colour for the Golden and Diamond Jubilees, tells PEOPLE: “In all the years I did the Queen’s Birthday Parade, it was Her Majesty the Queen there. To not have Her Majesty arriving was poignant and the fact that she went out onto the balcony was lovely.”
“I thought in my heart, how many more times am I going to see her Majesty like that? It was quite sad for a lot of reasons. I know the Platinum Jubilee is meant to be a wonderful occasion and something to mark 70 years, but it was tinged with sadness for me,” continues Mott, who is Commandant of Cadets at Valley Forge Military Academy. “It’s the end of a very powerful era. How much longer are we going to be blessed with her?”
Queen Elizabeth II and her cousin Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, celebrate her Platinum Jubilee in June, 2022.Chris Jackson/Getty Images

In a statement released on Sunday following the weekend’s events, the Queen acknowledged her absence.
source: people.com