Hairdresser Richard Ward's 7 Secrets of Grooming & Wellbeing

Creator of the renowned โ€˜Chelsea Blow Dryโ€™ โ€“ beautifully finished, shiny, bouncy hair โ€“ Richard is of course well-known for a bestselling signature range of haircare, as well as being a spokesperson on trends and innovations for the hair industry.

The successive lockdowns โ€“ when he couldnโ€™t style clients at his awad-winning Chelsea salon โ€“ had a silver lining to the cloud, for Richard, in that he found new ways to keep fit and stay mentally balanced, which have โ€˜stuckโ€™. He shares them hereโ€ฆ 

I likewalk for miles and miles, every day. Iโ€™m quite a big runner and in the past have done a few half-marathons, but during the lockdowns I really took up power-walking in a major way. I would go back and forth over the Thames bridges, sometimes all the way to Barnes, sometimes as much as 11 or 12 miles a day. Instead of riding my bike to the salon, I now walk when I can, spending some of the time making calls, the rest listening to podcasts โ€“ my new obsession.

 Podcasts are the most wonderful distraction. Theyโ€™re also a great accompaniment to walking. I listen via Wondery, a podcast app. I listen to lots of business podcasts but my absolute favourite is โ€˜Desert Island Discsโ€™; itโ€™s such an obvious concept but so brilliant, and I love the idea Iโ€™ve still got thousands of previous shows to discover โ€“ from Paul McCartney to Marlene Dietrich.

I also work out several times a week with weights. Walking isnโ€™t an all-over workout, so we have a little mini-gym in the garden where I keep up my strength โ€“ nothing too heavy, but dumbbells and weights for the upper body. I need to be fit for when I pick up that blow-drier again!

I try to follow Dr. Michael Mosleyโ€™s 5:2 diet. That means five days of eating pretty much what I like, and two days of restricted eating. Itโ€™s not for everyone but it works for me; as a hairdresser Iโ€™m used to skipping meals, so on my two low-calorie days, I tend to drink lots of fruit teas during the day and save my 800 calories for one good meal at suppertime.

Iโ€™ve discovered the joys of cooking later in life. Having said all of the above about 5:2-ing, getting together over family dinner each evening during successive lockdowns gave me time to cook properly. We set ourselves the challenge of cooking the style of โ€˜Come Dine With Meโ€™, taking it in turns to feed the family. Well, I was always good at a roast, but it taught me to be daring enough to try all kinds of dishes โ€“ poached salmon, seabass with caper and lemon butter, the makings of a โ€˜Greek nightโ€™ โ€“ and my confidence has grown hugely. Because I canโ€™t think of anything else when Iโ€™m cooking, I find it 100% relaxing. 

Iโ€™m embracing the grey. Iโ€™m very good at being objective about what other people should do to look great, but looking back, I now wish Iโ€™d stopped colouring my hair 10 years ago. Iโ€™ve been using the Richard Ward Silver Brightening Shampoo/ยฃ8 for 300ml. 

Meditation is also a big new part of my life. Iโ€™m doing 20 minutes in the morning and afternoon. I tried Headspace, but then I went to a meditation teacher at the London Meditation Centre to learn Vedic meditation. I am so much more grounded, as a result, and over the last year, Iโ€™m not exaggerating when I say itโ€™s been a life-saver. Like everyone, Iโ€™ve found lockdown hard โ€“ but itโ€™s honestly given me the chance to pause, take stock and focus on looking after my wellbeing.

richardward.com