Sunday Times

Meghan

Move over, Gwyneth Paltrow. Meghan Markle has raised the bar in the quest for Perfect Womanhood

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Why she takes the cake

If you are a woman striving to be the Perfect Woman, these must be challengin­g times. At the start of the year, it was relatively simple — you copied Gwyneth Paltrow. There it was, the complete perfection package: beauty, success (on a couple of fronts), connectedn­ess, children, marriage to someone highprofil­e or, in her case, married twice (even better, because that speaks of personal growth), plus a perfect 10 body and domestic skills. In case you’d forgotten, Gywneth is a published cookery writer — which you won’t have, if you know anything about Perfect Womanhood.

Which brings us to Meghan Markle, who is currently the ultimate PW frontrunne­r and increasing her lead by the day. In fact, in the wake of the Australian tour (notably the banana bread incident when, should you need reminding, Meghan arrived at Australia House and asked to be shown the kitchen, the glutenfree flour and the organic bananas, and promptly set about baking a cake to take to a local family the next day) she has raised the bar so high that even Gwyneth is lagging behind.

Meghan, having entered the competitio­n with all the necessary qualificat­ions (bar the children, now being worked on), has set about steadily adding to the PW package. And, let’s not forget, she is a duchess, married to the sixth in line to the British throne, who also happens to be our favourite royal. So. We’ve got work to do.

For anyone thinking of giving it a go, here are the latest additions to the Perfect Womanhood checklist:

● BEING HOMESPUN

Making your own jam, loving baking, cultivatin­g your own elderflowe­r to make into cordial — sorry to say, none of this quite cuts it any more. Being homespun now is a lifestyle choice: it’s not being able to “visit” without taking a homemade gift. It’s barefoot in the kitchen, hands-on in the nursery, your mom being your best friend.

● BEING A 99% HANDS-ON MOTHER

The latest news is that MM will be employing the services of Supernanny Connie as recommende­d by Amal Clooney (also a woman climbing the PW chart).

The point about this particular nanny is she’s less a babyminder than a parenting coach, the new PW rule being to distance yourself as far as possible from those high-achieving “thank God for the nanny” mummies.

Instead, Meghan will be present, and when she is not because she’s off doing something for charity, she’ll be leaning on her mother, Doria, who’s been enrolled in a child-rearing refresher course. Poor Doria, who was probably anticipati­ng some light Sunday afternoon grannywatc­hing, in a house full of staff.

Unlucky.

● EXPERT-LEVEL YOGA

You saw the pictures before the engagement was announced, and even your yoga teacher has been in the deep doldrums ever since. How to compete with that wheel, in white, clinging yoga togs? Unbelievab­le.

● LOOKING LIKE A BABE IN THE WOODS/DEFENCELES­S FAUN

This is the new PW requiremen­t. To be fair, Gwyneth has had a go at this — the Daddy’s Girl, freckle-faced, denimshort­s-on-the-farm look that she deploys during selling-cookery-books season — but now Cute Conservati­ve is the goal of the PW all year round.

The most important aspect of this look is groomed, lustrous hair, and brunette beats blonde. It also requires a thick set of eyelashes to look up through.

● SOCIAL CONSCIENCE

Not saying the Gwyneth aspirers never had one of these, but the new PW is vocal about her causes and has, at the very least, a TED talk under her belt or a foundation for war refugees. It’s part of the deal.

As we said, being perfect just got even harder.

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 ?? Picture: Getty Images/Tolga Akmen ??
Picture: Getty Images/Tolga Akmen
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 ?? Picture: Getty Images/Jenny Zarins ?? Meghan Markle cooks in a community kitchen after London’s Grenfell Tower fire. She contribute­d to a cookbook of recipes from the kitchen’s volunteers.
Picture: Getty Images/Jenny Zarins Meghan Markle cooks in a community kitchen after London’s Grenfell Tower fire. She contribute­d to a cookbook of recipes from the kitchen’s volunteers.

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