In a bombshell interview that aired Sunday on CBS, Markle said that she had developed suicidal thoughts after joining the British royal family and that she had been prevented from getting any help.
She said a friend had sent her a picture of her and Harry at London’s Royal Albert Hall taken the same day she told Harry she “didn’t want to be alive anymore.”
The picture, which was circulated widely at the time, showed a pregnant Markle in a dark blue sequined gown with Harry by her side, smiling and holding hands.
But Markle told Winfrey that “what I saw was the truth of what that moment was.”
The photo “still haunts me,” she said. “We had to go to an official event. We had to go to this event at the Royal Albert Hall, and a friend said, ‘I know you don’t look at pictures, but oh my God, you guys look so great.’
“And I zoomed in, and what I saw was the truth of what that moment was. Because right before we had to leave for that, I had just had that conversation with Harry that morning.”
Harry tried to persuade her not to go to the event, she said. But Markle said she told him, “I can’t be left alone.”
“And that picture, if you zoom in, what I see is how tightly his knuckles are gripped around mine,” she continued. “You can see the whites of our knuckles, because we are smiling and doing our job, but we’re both just trying to hold on.
“And every time that those lights went down in that royal box, I was just weeping, and he was gripping my hand.”
When the intermission came and the lights came up, Markle said, she’d have to be ready to face the public and be “on again.”
She said she had told Harry about her state of mind sitting on the front steps of their home, Frogmore Cottage, and the very next day approached “the institution” – royal staff – to ask for help. She said she was never given it.
Markle suggested that her situation showed that you can never judge someone’s state of mind from their demeanor.
“You have no idea what’s going on for someone behind closed doors,” she said. “Even the people that smile the biggest smiles and shine the brightest lights, it seems, to have compassion for what’s actually potentially going on.”
As of Monday morning in the UK, the royal family had not responded to the interview.
If you or someone you know is struggling with depression or has had thoughts of harming themselves or taking their own life, get help. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (1-800-273-8255) provides 24/7, free, confidential support for people in distress, as well as best practices for professionals and resources to aid in prevention and crisis situations.