Meghan Markle revealed she is entering a ‘chapter of joy’ in her life while speaking at her close friend Oprah Winfrey’s book club session in California.
The Duchess, 43, was one of several speakers who addressed the crowd at Goodmothers bookstore and gathering space in Summerland, located just miles from where she lives in Montecito, last night.
Meghan spoke about being ‘grateful’ for her ‘chapter of joy’ on the eve of the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth’s death, with today marking two years since the monarch passed away.
The Duchess said: ‘I’m looking at this time as my chapter of joy. The more you are able to look at your life and really, truly recognise and be able to be grateful for your life – you have to be grateful for all aspects of it.
‘My intentionality is to enjoy this chapter and be able to love through every piece of this as best we can.’
The star-studded event was attended by actor Marco Leone, astrology and psychology expert Dr Jennifer Freed, and author, teacher and psychic medium Laura Lynne Jackson, all of whom highlighted Meghan on their Instagram stories.
Godmothers, co-owned by literary agent Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, just celebrated its grand opening weekend by hosting a slew of events and ‘conversations’ with celebrities and authors.
The bookstore appears to be promoting several popular celebrity books including Meghan’s children’s book The Bench and Prince Harry’s memoir, which can be found front-and-centre in the shop, on its ‘hometown heroes’ shelf.
Harry, the son of King Charles, spent his entire life in Britain before relocating to the US with Meghan in 2020.
Meghan appeared at the event last night, on the eve of the second anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II’s death.
While it is unclear what the Duchess said in her address, the crowd appeared to be eating it up with Jackson branding Meghan as one of the evening’s ‘light-filled speakers’.
Godmothers, which is concluding its grand opening weekend with events today, is seemingly proud of Meghan and Harry, whom the owner has hailed as a ‘hometown hero’.
Walsh, in a video promoting the store, has put Harry’s memoir on display with a collection of books penned by local writers.
Meghan’s book The Bench, a picture book for children published in 2021, is also on the shelf.
‘This is our local authors shelf when you first walk in,’ she said of the display. ‘I want it to be when you first walk in so that authors who are local to the area know that this is their hometown bookstore.
‘And we celebrate our hometown authors as if they were our hometown heroes, because to us they are.’
It is not surprising that Meghan, who lives in the same city as Winfrey, was invited to the talk show host’s book club session yesterday.
Winfrey has been close friends with Meghan for several years now and was a guest at the royal wedding in May 2018. Their relationship appears to have grown even stronger over the years after the Sussexes moved into a $14million Montecito mansion, which is located just a stone’s throw from Oprah’s own sprawling home.
Then, in March 2021, she sat down with the couple for a bombshell 85-miniute tell-all interview that aired on primetime TV, in which the couple aired a series of very damaging allegations about the royal family.
She even publicly weighed in on whether she thought the should attend King Charles’ Coronation in May 2023.
‘I think they should do what they feel is best for them and their family. That’s what I think,’ she said on the CBS Mornings show ahead of the event, adding: ‘They haven’t asked me my opinion.’
Harry ultimately attended the Coronation without Meghan and left immediately after the ceremony to return to California.
In January 2020, the Sussexes fled the Royal Family and the UK to begin their new life in America, ostensibly to be far from press intrusion and media attention. But it didn’t take them long to return to the public eye.
Chatting in the sun-kissed garden of a Californian mansion – which turned out to owned by a friend of Oprah – then-heavily-pregnant Meghan described her time in the Royal Family as a nightmare that she’d barely survived.
She claimed she had to turn over her passport, driver’s licence, keys and other personal belongings when she moved into the cramped confines of Nottingham Cottage in the grounds of Kensington Palace.
‘I left the house twice in four months,’ she told Oprah on March 7, 2021, adding, ‘I couldn’t feel lonelier.’
She compared herself to Ariel, the main character in the Disney animated film The Little Mermaid, which sees a mermaid princess exchange her voice for legs in order to marry her prince.
‘She falls in love with a prince and because of that she loses her voice,’ Meghan said, alleging she had been ‘silenced’ by the family.
She further claimed the situation had deteriorated to the point that she’d even contemplated suicide.
Meghan alleged that Palace staff didn’t offer her help when she went to them begging for support even though she was then six months pregnant with Archie.
The other bombshell was the Sussexes’ suggestion that the Royal Family was collectively racist, pointing the finger at one – unnamed – member who, they alleged, had speculated about the colour of their son Archie’s skin when Meghan was pregnant in a racist way.
Harry, who looked tense during the interview, confirmed Meghan’s accusation, saying he was the one who’d heard these comments and had told his wife.
Harry and Meghan said they would not reveal who made the statement, with Meghan saying, ‘I think that would be very damaging to them [to reveal].’
Yet later on – in particular when Harry published his memoir, Spare – this particular controversy appeared to have been forgotten.
The Duke and Duchess also raised eyebrows by claiming to have been officially married by the Archbishop of Canterbury three days before their actual wedding day in May 2018.
Whatever did take place before the official ceremony at St George’s Chapel, the Archbishop of Canterbury denied it was a wedding.
Meghan used the interview to quash reports that she had made her sister-in-law Catherine, the then-Duchess of Cambridge, cry in the run-up to her wedding over Princess Charlotte’s bridesmaid’s outfit.
In fact, said the Duchess of Sussex, the opposite was true, the Duchess of Cambridge was the one who made her cry.
Harry didn’t pull his punches where the Royal Family was concerned either.
He accused members of The Firm of jealousy towards Meghan for the ‘effortless’ manner in which Meghan had captivated the public during their tour of the Commonwealth and ‘how good she was at the job’.
And for the first time he made it clear that he and Prince William were at odds saying that, ‘he loved him to bits’, but that, ‘we’re on different paths’.
He also described the then Prince Charles and William as ‘trapped’. ‘They don’t get to leave and I have compassion for that,’ he said.
What the members of the Royal Family feel about the interview isn’t known as most of them have remained silent in response, but Prince William’s own response to a reporter was simply the passing comment: ‘We are very much not a racist family.’
The Queen, who has since passed away, only released a statement hinting that the Sussexes account might not be the same as hers.
‘The whole family is saddened to learn the full extent of how challenging the last few years have been for Harry and Meghan,’ Queen Elizabeth II said at the time.
‘The issues raised, particularly that of race, are concerning. While some recollections may vary, they are taken very seriously and will be addressed by the family privately.
‘Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much loved family members.’