Meghan Markle and Prince Harry are working on their wedding guest list, and a source spoke exclusively in the new issue of Us Weekly about whether or not Harry’s ex-girlfriends — Chelsy Davy and Cressida Bonas — will be invited to the upcoming royal nuptials.
“Both will be going through the list carefully. Don’t expect to see Cressida invited —the two didn’t remain friends— but do not be surprised if Chelsy shows up with a date. The two have remained friends long after ending their relationship and still keep in touch to this day,” a source told Us. “She congratulated him the minute the engagement news was announced. Meghan would have no problem with her being there and Chelsy was on the preliminary list of friends to invite.
Caitlyn Jenner Seeking Surgical Treatment Amid Painful Medical Crisis
Caitlyn Jenner could be going under the knife again just a year after having her gender confirmation surgery.
The I Am Cait star is said to be facing yet another major medical procedure stemming from her transition. Radar Online reports 68-year-old’s health has been declining ever since she started wearing heels in public, exacerbating an old knee injury that’s rumored to have worsen as she got older.
According to a source, the Olympian is looking at serious surgery if she doesn’t stop stepping into her favorite stilettos soon.
“Her doctors beg her to give up her stiletto collection, but she refuses!” an insider told the outlet.
Caitlyn’s problem with her weak knees is believed to have only gotten worse since she transitioned in 2015. As she’s spending more and more time in heels, her legs are said have taken a serious hit from constantly wearing the uncomfortable footwear.
“Cait’s paying for it now. Her knees stiffen up and ache,” the source spilled, adding “the discomfort is sometimes unbearable.”
In her memoir, The Secrets of My Life, Caitlyn revealed she suffered a nasty blow to her knee while playing college football. She had to undergo operation for medial collateral ligament damage in 1969, in which a doctor opened up the knee and placed a staple in it to help stabilize it.
“My knee was placed in a cast for six weeks, and I have already miss four weeks of the second semester when I return to Graceland. I can’t run track, so instead I have to watch everyone else. I am trying to walk since my knee is horribly stiff from being in a cast for so long,” she wrote. “Freshman year becomes a disaster: I have no motivation to stay in school when I’m deprived of the outlet of sports. The only good thing about my knee surgery is that I will most likely flunk the physical when I’m drafted.”