When Meghan Markle sits down with the rest of the royal family for their traditional Christmas dinner, it will be like being transported into 'another reality'.
That's the opinion of Princess Diana's longtime butler Paul Burrell, who believes, based on his own experience, that the Duchess of Sussex will not be used to the intense four-nday period she'll go through at Sandringham Palace.
After the year Meghan has gone through with her own dysfunctional family - from her father Thomas Sr partaking in staged paparazzi photos to half-sister Samantha's stream of vile public outbursts - she'd be entitled to think that a glass of sherry with the Windsors would make a welcoming change.
Yet 60-year-old Burrell warns that other royals will be out to trip her up at Christmas, and offers the advice: 'Stay close to Harry and his granny… or you're in trouble!'
When Meghan Markle sits down with the rest of the royal family for their traditional Christmas dinner, it'll be like being transported into 'another reality', says Princess Diana's former butler Paul Burrell
The Duchess of Sussex should prepare herself for an intense four days at the Sandringham estate, which will be 'occupied by some of the biggest personalities and egos in the country', says Burrell
Burrell, who served as a footman to the Queen and butler to Diana for a total of 21 years, feels great sympathy for the baptism of fire that Markle, 37, has so far faced.
Although this will be nothing compared to what will hit her on Christmas Eve when she travels up to the country estate in Norfolk, England.
Burrell explains that the festive period has always been used by the royal members to curry favor with the monarch and Meghan should seize the opportunity to talk to Her Majesty about what's on her mind after a tumultuous few months where she's been saddled as 'difficult' and blamed for a rift with sister-in-law Kate Middleton.
Burrell, who served as a footman to the Queen and butler to Diana for a total of 21 years, feels great sympathy for the baptism of fire that Markle, 37, has so far faced
Burrell said: 'It's the most intense period of the year, I've been there for so many Christmases, this house is occupied by some of the biggest personalities and egos in the country.
'All these people are members of the royal family, they are all larger than life, have character to go with it. Everyone is jostling for position and attention, and they're bouncing off the walls after four days. It's like a pinball machine.
'They all want to please the Queen and want airtime with her, it's the one time that they can sit down with the head of the family and make an impression.
'It's what I said to Diana when she first came into the family, try to get airtime with the Queen, speak into her ear.
'The best time to do it is when she's seated at her card table, before and after dinner, she will sit and play Bridge or Canasta and she'll always ask people to join her, that's your chance to get quality time and tell the monarch what you're thinking and feeling.
'That's the time Meghan should grasp, don't be talking dresses and jewels with other royals, head for the Queen. The Queen is the most humble, approachable and kind person you'll ever meet, she's a great listener, nothing will shock her, she's heard everything, and you can tell her everything, and it will be safe.
'The Queen has to be informed from the horse's mouth, if you don't do that, you're doing an injustice, I hope that Meghan will get this advice from Harry, that granny knows best.
'If you speak your fears, she will take it onboard and speak to the right person. She will change the rules, she did it for William and Harry, she can do it, but only if she knows about it.'
Burrell, who quit being a royal butler after Diana's death in 1997 (pictured together in August 1997) and now runs a florist in Farndon, Cheshire, understands the pressure cooker royal environment more than most
Burrell explains the festive period has always been used by the royal members to curry favor with the monarch and Meghan should seize the opportunity to talk to Her Majesty. Above Meghan is pictured during her first Christmas with the royals in 2017
Burrell, who quit being a royal butler after Diana's death in 1997 and now runs a florist shop in Farndon, Cheshire, understands the pressure cooker royal environment more than most.
He adds: 'I personally think she's finding it tough in there, no one could prepare her for it, not even on a film set, but this is the real world. Imagine Downton, but ramp it up. Sandringham is Downton Abbey on speed.
'It is daunting as everyone around that table is a very famous person on the world stage, there's not many times you can look at a dining room table and think: 'Oh my goodness'.
'I am sure Meghan will sit at that dining room table with her heart beating double time, thinking: 'Pinch me, is this real?' It's far from reality, so detached from our world.
'From the minute she arrives, she'll be met by a valet and a dresser, who will unpack her suitcase and wash and lay out her clothes every morning, then pack her bag up again when it's over.
'This will be an intense period until the minute she leaves, she'll have to give up her time completely as it's about the royal family, she'll have to understand that.'
Burrell isn't surprised about the recent negative press surrounding Meghan - stories that she demanded air fresheners at her wedding in the 'musty' Windsor chapel and apparently made sister-in-law Kate cry over daughter Charlotte's bridesmaid's fitting.
It's exactly what happened to his old boss, the tragic Princess of Wales.
The 60-year-old has offered some advice to Meghan, saying to stay close to her husband Prince Harry and take advantage of the intimate setting to get airtime with the Queen
The former butler warns that other royals will be out to get her at Christmas, explaining: 'Kate came from their [sort of] background, Meghan isn't like that. They are going to set traps, there will be pitfalls along the way'
Burrell said: 'The Queen will be very aware of the media attention [on Meghan], she reads every single newspaper, every morning.
'She scans each one, then sees what they say, and makes an informed decision, based on what she reads with what she knows. She can then know if it's truth or fiction.
'She will try to resolve it, she will take her grandsons to one side, and ask: ''Is there any truth in this?'' Or: ''I've heard this, how can I be of help?'' She's their granny. She loves them very much and wants them to be very happy. The Queen is their best friend.
'At least Meghan has the support of Harry, he's been there, done it, it's part of his world. This is the way granny does it, we pay respect to it.
'She's already the same age as when Diana died, so is a mature woman, who comes from a mixed race background, and is American - these are positives that the royals should embrace to go forward in my eyes.
'But she's going to come up with opposition within the four walls of the royal household and they will be seen as negatives, like Diana did.'
This Christmas will be like nothing she's experienced - a British royal family that is 'entrenched in history, tradition, protocol, timetables - it's a strict world, it's a world Meghan's not used to,' says Burrell. Pictured: Meghan with family members including her father Thomas Markle Sr
Burrell continued: 'Because Kate came from their [sort of] background, Meghan isn't like that. They are going to set traps, there will be pitfalls along the way, but Harry will catch her, so stay close to him. Nothing will happen if you're close to the Queen's grandson.
'But if you stray away from him and start to do things by yourself, that's when there could be problems.'
This Christmas will be like nothing she's experienced - a British royal family that is 'entrenched in history, tradition, protocol, timetables - it's a strict world, it's a world Meghan's not used to,' says Burrell.
In years gone by with the Markle family as a child, she'd be delivering turkeys to homeless shelters in Skid Row, a square mile of downtown Los Angeles riddled with thousands of destitute people packed in dirty tents on the sidewalks.
But that didn't stop the Markle family from helping those in need with her now divorced parents Thomas Markle and Doria Ragland insisting on handing out turkeys at holiday times.
At one stage, Markle even volunteered at Hippie Kitchen, a long-standing Skid Row soup kitchen.
In an essay on her humanitarian work, Markle later wrote: 'My parents came from little so they made a choice to give a lot: buying turkeys for homeless shelters at Thanksgiving, delivering meals to people in hospices, giving spare change to those asking for it.'
In years gone by with the Markle family as a child, she'd be delivering turkeys to homeless shelters in Skid Row, a square mile of downtown Los Angeles riddled with thousands of destitute people packed in dirty tents on the sidewalks
Meghan at one point even volunteered at Hippie Kitchen (pictured) a long-standing Skid Row soup kitchen, writing in her blog that she was influenced by her parents, who 'came from little so they made a choice to give a lot'
In an exclusive interview, her nephew Tyler Dooley explains that she's always had the 'common touch'.
He says: 'Not coming from a royal background, but very humble beginnings, she was just a commoner - as the Brits would call it. She was just a normal person, but she has always had this ability to help people and the power to change things.
'She wants to put smiles on people faces, she's happiest when among people who haven't got anything.'
Dooley remembers fondly Christmases with his aunt Meghan, especially on one occasion, with Markle's father and his grandad, Thomas Sr.
'I remember one Christmas, my grandfather would take me, my brother and Meghan, and we'd go to the mall in Los Angeles, and he literally said you can get anything you want in the store. My brother and I looked at each other, and were like: ''How cool is that?''
'My grandfather is like a big teddy bear. It was so cool, all the Christmas lights, music playing, we ran into the toy store and got whatever we wanted, it was an amazing experience,' says Dooley.
Link hienalouca.com
https://hienalouca.com/2018/12/14/dianas-butler-paul-burrell-tells-meghan-markle-to-stay-close-to-harry-at-sandringham/
Main photo article When Meghan Markle sits down with the rest of the royal family for their traditional Christmas dinner, it will be like being transported into ‘another reality’.
That’s the opinion of Princess Diana‘s longtime butler Paul Burrell, who believes, based on his own experience,...
It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.
Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.
Dianne Reeves US News HienaLouca
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