Following the revelation of Meghan Markle's reasons for the rupture with Edward Enninful, a royal biographer has offered his take on the situation.
The author in question, Mr Hugo Vickers, talked with The Sun a day after the disclosure.
He says, "None of this shocks me since we see it all the time when things don't go her way. "She simply overreacts."
"Clearly in this case with Edward Enninful, she has made something of an enemy, because he then dropped her from something she would have liked to be a part of, and it seems to happen the whole time."
For those unfamiliar, the problem reportedly arose after the Duchess' ambitions for a Vogue cover were dashed.
And, according to Mr Vickers, "she is really exacting. She is difficult to work with. She has her own ideas about what she wants to achieve, and she doesn't appear to want to listen to anyone else, which is when you get into problems."
And with that, the author started identifying Meghan's apparent 'theme'. "Her father for one, who was very good to her when she was growing up, her first husband, just gets dumped, her Canadian chef lover in Canada, dumped as well."
Next, "Jessica Mulroney, her great friend in Canada, dumped," adding "the entire British Royal family, and apart from her mother, all her own family."
With this list, he labeled the feud with her friend a "normal theme" and stated, "she should listen to somebody like Edward Enninful, he's a very highly qualified editor, and he knows what he's doing, running a very important magazine."
Mr Vickers even interjected his own opinions toward the conclusion, saying, "I would have thought it would have been well in her interest to keep in touch with him, instead of upsetting him." But "she does not know better. Unfortunately, as has been demonstrated again and again.
Before he left, he said, "she is just so incredibly difficult, and that is the theme, and that is the narrative now, and I suspect that that will go on and probably get worse." ... "I really feel sorry for those children, and I wonder what sort of what they're going to think when they grow up and realise how they're being used in these things as well."