Meghan Markle opens up about the hidden guilt women often feel around wealth and success, revealing her personal struggles with societal expectations and emotional conflict while encouraging others to redefine self-worth beyond public judgment.

 

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In a world obsessed with wealth, hustle, and high achievement, Meghan Markle has decided to pause and ask a question few in her position ever do: what if having a lot makes you feel guilty?

The Duchess of Sussex, in the season finale of her podcast Confessions of a Female Founder, revealed a deeply personal and unexpected struggle—one that touches not only on money, but on the emotional weight women often carry when success arrives.

Speaking alongside billionaire entrepreneur Sara Blakely, founder of Spanx, Meghan opened up about what she calls the “guilt mentality” that tends to emerge when women begin to gain financial power.

It’s a quiet, internal conflict: a tension between ambition and humility, pride and shame, abundance and discomfort.

“Having a lot,” Meghan admitted, can come with complex emotions, especially when society still conditions women to stay quiet about wealth—or worse, to feel unworthy of it.

 

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This insight is especially striking coming from someone who has been in the spotlight for most of her adult life.

Meghan’s path—from Hollywood actress to member of the British royal family to independent businesswoman and podcast host—has been anything but conventional.

When she and Prince Harry stepped back from their royal duties in 2020, the world watched with intense scrutiny as they began to build a new life in California.

With lucrative media deals, a new home in Montecito, and growing public influence, the couple’s pursuit of financial independence has been as criticized as it has been admired.

But according to Meghan, wealth hasn’t brought her only freedom—it has brought self-reflection, too.

As she discussed on the podcast, building her lifestyle brand, American Riviera Orchard, while raising two young children has illuminated how emotionally loaded success can be, particularly for women.

Society celebrates female entrepreneurs, she noted, but still subjects them to harsh judgment when they start to actually thrive.

 

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What makes Meghan’s revelations compelling is not just that she’s rich, famous, and powerful. It’s that she’s willing to admit she’s still learning how to feel okay with it.

That she still hears those quiet, critical voices—the ones that suggest she should feel guilty for wanting more, or for having more than others. And that she’s calling out a culture that demands women overperform and overgive, then quietly punishes them for achieving too much.

Blakely, too, echoed this feeling, recalling how it took her years to become comfortable with success. The conversation turned into more than a chat about entrepreneurship—it became a call for women to rewrite the narratives they’ve inherited about worthiness, money, and visibility.

Meghan’s message was clear: it’s time to dismantle the systems that shame women for stepping into power.

Her words resonate particularly strongly when viewed against the backdrop of the intense media scrutiny she and Prince Harry have endured. Since leaving the royal family, they’ve been labeled everything from opportunists to rebels, their every move dissected by tabloids.

The podcast, then, serves as more than just a platform—it’s a space where Meghan can reclaim her voice, tell her story, and speak directly to the women she wants to reach.

 

Meghan Markle admits she feels guilty for having wealth yet fears she'll  “never have enough”

 

She also used the opportunity to reflect on the role of mothers and caregivers in business and society, pointing out how often women are expected to juggle impossible demands—being nurturing yet assertive, selfless yet ambitious, supportive yet driven.

In Meghan’s view, wealth is not just about dollars and cents—it’s about redefining what it means to be successful and fulfilled on your own terms, even when the world tells you you shouldn’t.

The conversation also marks a strategic moment in Meghan’s evolving public image. Her brand, As Ever, still relatively new, is slowly building its presence through lifestyle offerings centered on wellness, beauty, and mindful living.

And her decision to end the podcast season with such a vulnerable and introspective discussion signals a clear intention: Meghan isn’t trying to sell perfection—she’s trying to sell realness. Honest, messy, complicated truth.

 

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Interestingly, some listeners have speculated whether this podcast marks the beginning of a broader return to the public stage for Meghan. With reports swirling about new creative projects, brand expansions, and possible collaborations, she seems poised for a major new chapter.

But if this episode is any indication, that next chapter won’t be about projecting an image—it will be about telling the truth behind it.

As the podcast wrapped, Meghan left listeners with a challenge: to question their own relationship with money, to unlearn the narratives that shame them for wanting more, and to be brave enough to redefine what success means on their own terms.

Her voice—both literal and metaphorical—has never sounded more certain.

In the end, Meghan Markle’s reflections on wealth, guilt, and womanhood reveal a deeper truth: even those who seem to have it all are still untangling what it means to feel worthy of it. And maybe, just maybe, that’s the most powerful confession of all.