The couple talks about their first meeting in Netflix documentary of them. It was a blind date, that their friends arranged.
Harry saw Meghan in a video posted by one of his friend. After that, he constantly asked for Meghan to his friend.
At last, they were agreed to meet in Soho House in London, but Harry was late to the meeting.
“I couldn’t understand why he would be late, but he kept texting. He was like, ‘I’m in traffic. I’m so sorry.’” Meghan said in the documentary.
“I was panicking, I was freaking out, I was, like, sweatin’.” Harry expleined.
“I was like, ‘Oh, is this what he does?’ Got it. Like this, I’m not doing. I’m not gonna sit…..”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Harry interrupted her
“Like you’re one of those guys who have so much of an ego that any girl would sit waiting for a half hour for you,” Meghan addded.
“I was just not interested in that.”
“I was a hot, sweaty, red ball of mess,” Henry said.
“You were just so sweet, you were genuinely so embarrassed and late.”
After their date, Harry thought that she was the one for him.
He proposed to her with an engagement ring that has his mother’s diamonds.
They married on May 19, 2018, at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle.
There were lots of drama since they quitted from their royal roles, they kept going strong.
Princess Diana’s former butler, Paul Burrell, has revealed the reason behind their strong relationship.
“Harry went for and married Meghan because she’s like Diana. Both women who would always stand up for what they believe in and wouldn’t be pushovers.”
“I think, possibly, they would have clashed,” he said about Diana and Meghan.
“I imagine it would have been two strong, independent women with different views on things—it would have been a battle between Meghan’s way and Diana’s way.”
“I think the main difference between them is that Meghan has a game plan, whereas Diana was young and naive,” he continued.
“Diana did the book with Andrew Morton and courted the press over the years because she didn’t have a voice. And her strong-mindedness meant she cared and she felt the people of the country had a right to know what had gone on behind closed doors.” Paul Burrell concluded.
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