Prince Harry has just received a barrage of warnings about his intentions for a Netflix series about losing parents and dealing with mental health issues.
Sally Baker, a relationship guru, offered these concerns to the Duke of Sussex.
She began by accusing Prince Harry of "mining his family" for fodder and warning him of the dangers of exposing his shared tragedy with Prince William in public.
For those who are unaware, the couple paid an eye-watering price of £3 million for this narrative, which exposes agony, post-natal depression, and the trauma of losing a parent in a vehicle accident.
Meet Me At The Lake is a Carley Fortune romantic story.
Since the announcements, experts have been pointing to the startling similarities between the couple's personal lives.
So much so that Ms Barker of Working On The Body come up to explain that, while the book may be "cathartic," it "is not Harry's story and hopefully offers some distance for him from his reality of having lost his own beloved mother in similar circumstances."
She explained everything in an interview with the Mirror US.
During this conversation, she also stated, "Creating an artistic response to tragedy is a way of transforming grief."
"However, depending on how closely he's required to work on this project, it's also likely to evoke profoundly painful memories and emotions for Harry as well."
She also advised him that he will require "immense courage and vulnerability to revisit such deep grief," considering his "unresolved trauma and sadness."
She went on to say later in the conversation, "it may also temporarily strain relations with his brother William, who is bound to think Harry is still mining their family narrative for his own sensational content."
Not to mention the possibility that Prince William "may feel the coincidences in this project confront publicly deep wounds from their childhood."
However, she feels that "Harry has a chance here to bring attention to the long shadow cast by sudden tragic loss, and hopefully help others dealing with similar trauma."
Ms Barker said, "Pulling from real loss and anguish infuses the work with a truth and rawness that resonates." Even when fictionalised, stories based on true events and emotions can have a greater effect. I wish him the best of luck on his challenging artistic path."