Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have decided that being senior royals is not for them anymore and announced that they will be stepping down from their roles. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex then resided in Canada with their son Archie before heading to Los Angeles, where they are living at the moment.
Until the coronavirus lockdown is lifted, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will not be able to return to the UK to see the Royal family. Now, a royal expert claims that the Duke of Sussex is beginning to regret his royal exit as he is, allegedly, feeling “tremendously isolated” with Meghan Markle.
"I really worry about Prince Harry,” Angela Mollard said. "He is someone who is very connected to his family as it is all he has ever known. He had his life with his mum Princess Diana and his dad Prince Charles and then he had his life with them separately when they divorced. Then he lost his mum and then he was with his dad and Prince William and the structure of the Royal Family and the work he has done within that, particularly the military work, have been a very stabilizing influence in his life. He has no connection with that now. In fact of all the times to move apart from the Royal Family I can imagine that right now he feels tremendously isolated.”
The royal expert shared that Prince Harry only has Meghan Markle and their son Archie during this global health crisis. Since he had been part of the Royal family all his life, which is known to be the stability of the British people, the Duke of Sussex feel “no real sense of purpose” during the coronavirus pandemic.
“He is just with Meghan and their son, they will be having no contact with friends and he can't engage with anything purposeful at the moment," Angela Mollard said. "Prince Harry has many talents and he has a particular ability at bringing people together and really understanding issues and feeling very passionate about those issues. Prince Harry has no real sense of purpose among that at the moment. Presumably behind the scenes he and Meghan Markle are working on this charity and what they are going to do going forward. But you have to imagine that he is really wondering what he has done and what that might mean for the future."