Sheridan France INterview

sheridanoriginal-synced

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Arthur: Sheridan, France, it's such a pleasure to have you here today. Thank you. Sheridan you've been an expert in facial aesthetics for over 20 years.

You are rated number one by Google as number one lip fill in oven.

And I start to fill the room with pioneer of the liquid facelift.

And you were trained by the baron of Botox?

Dr. Frederick Brandt. You spend your time making people f look fantastic, what does that give people?

Sheridan: Most women like it because it makes 'em feel good about themselves.

Yeah. And it gives them confidence, whether that's confidence in their relationship or confidence themselves, or just confidence for their work. Could be many reasons why.

Arthur: I'm sure most every client you can remember and how it changes, you just see the, that them get so lit up from

Sheridan: Yeah.

Arthur: That these transformations.

Sheridan: Yeah.

Arthur: What do you think, looking good does for people?

Sheridan: It's very difficult just to say, isn't it? Yeah. I think people age. In different ways. Some [00:01:00] people have just a very, they just age 'cause they've been the sun or they just have bad luck in their lives.

They have a, relationship hasn't worked or very stressful jobs or illness, and it's often nothing to do with their choices. It's just happened to them and it can make them. Older and more tired and sometimes they just want to refresh themselves and sometimes wipe away that memory really and just go back to looking good and confident.

Arthur: When you think about people who are really confident, how do you feel like people can get that? Because sadly, one does meet people who look fantastic, but they just don't feel that they don't connect to their real beauty.

Sheridan: I think that's psychological, isn't it?

And I think it's multifaceted. I think how people feel about themselves can, is obviously how they internally, how they feel and their confidence, their experiences, often what's happening in their childhood. They can look very beautiful on the outside, but if they don't have confidence on the [00:02:00] inside, they don't make the most of their beauty.

And sometimes you get people who are not so beautiful, but they have such an air of confidence and charm that people gravitate to them.

Arthur: How do you think people get to being like that,

Having that sense of inner. Calmness.

Sheridan: I think getting to know yourself and knowing what works for you.

Experience. I think life experiences. I think age as well. The funny thing is as people get older people, I think women always think it's such a, everything's so negative about getting older. But actually I think getting older is really fabulous because you. Are much more relaxed about things. You don't get so stressed, you, you don't get so worried and you have the experiences and know that everything changes so bad times will soon become good times again.

Arthur: Yeah. Yeah. You mean jump my thoughts there?

Sheridan: Do you agree with me on that one?

Arthur: Completely. Completely. And [00:03:00] yeah, calmness and knowing yourself. You'll meet so many amazing people coming in, all their great different takes in life.

Are there some things you've seen in people that you have adopted?

Maybe it's chatting to people who are coming in through the doors.

Just their mentality on a subject that is different to yours. But you thought, wow, that I'm gonna take a scoop of that out of that.

Sheridan: Yeah. Some things maybe. But I don't get that person with my patients. Yeah. They, most of the time or a lot of the time, they are come to me and I give them lots of support and energy and my time and it's more about what I can give to them. Really.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: That's more what my job involves.

Making them fabulous. Understanding the motors of why they're here, understanding. How much work they want or how little work they want to do. Understanding things like have they got an event next week, we've better than just do a little bit today and then maybe the rest in, three [00:04:00] weeks time or something.

My focus is really on them.

Arthur: Yeah, it's funny 'cause walking through the doors, the, you know of or your wonderful, place here. We're in Marlin, right? Would you say

Sheridan: Fitzrovia?

Arthur: Fitzrovia

Sheridan: I think it's a little bit more trendier than Mar right now.

Arthur: I, yeah, I get trying to keep up.

Sheridan: I know next week would be something else.

Arthur: Yeah. Yeah. Clear, this place you've done designed so beautifully, but it's really a reflection of you and you've got this crazy calm nature, which Oh, really. I'm sure people, listening or senses and feel has, have you always had that

Sheridan: No.

Arthur: About you?

Sheridan: No, I think it comes with age.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: I think beauty is something that comes from inside and there's a lot of emphasis on youth and beauty and especially in America, they love all that kind of cheerleader. The younger, the Bella that look really fresh and everything.

And, but actually in the continent, in places like Italy and France, they really celebrate the older woman and the they find that very attractive as a maturity. And I think [00:05:00] calmness comes from, as I said. Before, it comes from knowing yourself. When I was in my twenties, I was really anxious.

I found it a really stressful time because you're thrown as a young person, if you come from quite a protective family and you're thrown into sort of an adult world. And I moved to London and it's suddenly you're kind. You have to be all these things and you have to understand everything and it can be really stressful.

And then there's careers and what are you gonna do in the universities and finding money for rent and jobs and relationships and everything. And it's just very stressful. But then as you get older, it's great because then you realize actually if I do that, that come, you learn to be, and things are a bit more calm for that reason.

Arthur: And things naturally have a way of unfolding.

Sheridan: Yeah. You learn your own limitations. And also you learn you, you learn that, it's okay. It's all gonna be okay.

I think young people find it very stressful, especially nowadays. Really stressful.

And they worry, especially women. I see very young, women in [00:06:00] their twenties, 25 coming to the clinic and they're so anxious. A lot of 'em are on these dating apps and they come in and they have treatment or they wanna have treatment and it's just to please somebody else. And it's just, they're on this it's very anxiety promoting,

and if they just took a step back and just accepted who they were. And that's changing. The Kardashians and the Instagram and the social media, five years, it was absolutely at its peak of giving young people stress about how they look. And people are aware, especially with things like, ai, they can't keep up with those images.

It's impossible to keep up with those images, that it's all fake, really. And there's a step away from that at the moment, and I think people going more towards natural work.

Arthur: I bet so many people come in here, they'll be lucky enough to, get your treatment and your insight, but also , your pockets of wisdom and I bet they end up wanting to call you up and be like, by the way, this ended up going really well are there any messages that we haven't covered that you feel [00:07:00] you do want to push to young, maybe young women or young people generally?

Sheridan: I do, you know what? I think the thing is, go and have your photograph taken right for your passport. You think, oh God, I look terrible in that photograph. And then 10 years later you have to renew the pho. You have to actually, I look great. And it's like being able to at that moment recognize what you have, that actually you've got youth and you've got fabulous skin.

And so many young, women in their twenties and thirties, all they look at is the faults. And they don't see the beauty that they've got, the natural, youthful beauty, and they look at. The faults in there, they just ho in on the faults but people don't see that, they come in and they say, oh, I don't like that.

But I say do you know what? I didn't even notice that people see the whole picture. People see the essence of somebody, don't you think?

Arthur: Totally. Totally. And we live in such a funny world and every country's got its own culture and. We live in a culture in Britain where we're not telling each other the great things about what we see because it's not the the dumb thing to do [00:08:00] necessarily.

Are there things that you feel like, we should be communicating to each other more

Sheridan: My way of doing aesthetics has always been about. The individual. So it's always been about bringing out the beauty of that individual face.

'cause every face is beautiful. It's just, I find it horran, these sort of faces that all look the same. And I think just. Using a little bit of filler, a little bit of aesthetics to just enhance something.

And that's, that's great. And I think there is a move towards that now.

I think people have been aware of that, that not this generic face that's, surgically or, operated on, that looks the same. They all these girls at one stage wanting this particular look. I think people are aware that it's not really that attractive anymore.

Arthur: You've been described as an artist.

Oh,

Sheridan: have,

Arthur: and it's been,

Sheridan: that's nice.

Arthur: Probably

Sheridan: by, I'm my daughter.

Arthur: We're

Sheridan: probably when I, when we [00:09:00] compete for paintings,

Arthur: probably by, but people in their thousands. But

Sheridan: oh, that's very kind.

Arthur: It's impossible to truly understand the journey of someone who's not really been in that position of what.

You go through when you see a face, you come across a client. Can you walk us through how it works? Because there's so many parts to this, right? You wanna make someone look good, people are different. And then obviously there's the , technical skill of working with someone's face.

Sheridan: It's a lot of experience. I was just very lucky. I was just in the right place at the right time. I worked with two fantastic consultants, cosmetic consultants surgeons and they basically wanted me to look after the skin and then I end up look doing all their injectables.

So I was baptism by fire underneath these wonderful guys that they were there to support me. And then along came Dr. Brand, who was flown in by a very famous singer he was her dermatologist at the time. And I became great friends with him. [00:10:00] He taught me everything.

So I used to go to Miami and learn his skill, he did all the stars. Very innovative. He was at the beginning of it all, he did lots of trials for Restylane and lots of trials for Botox. He was known as a bone and Botox, and, he really pushed things.

I've just been very lucky. So when I see a face, I. It's experience, it's knowing, and through those years of experience, I've tried out different products and then you really get to know what really works. And I don't really go far off that really. Now I kind of stick with the same things because I've never had any complication in 30 years.

Never had a problem at all. Good products. A bit of dusting of artistry. Not much, I don't think. I think

Arthur: lot too much modesty.

Sheridan: I think lots and lots of experience. And just stay natural and not overfil. The problem is that, it's a billion dollar industry and people are, some, a lot of people are not that ethical and they're driven by money.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: And they see dollar signs when people walk in the clinic. You have to be so ethical. You have [00:11:00] to really put, be patient centered and put that patient's needs first and never think about money. In fact, a friend of mine who said , he owned Molten Brown, and he said to me, if it, not me personally ever chase money, but never chase money.

Always chase being an expert in something and money will follow. And that's key, being expert caring about patients and you'll have a successful business, but if you chase, keep, upsell to people, they come in and then you fill their faces. And that is one of the biggest problems at the moment, is that patients have been so overfilled

Arthur: and that's why they come to you.

Yeah. These people who have had their. Sheridan's got an amazing website and it's

Sheridan: We try to convey, people's stories and natural people in their lives. Real people.

Arthur: I can't imagine the journey of someone coming here saying, Sheridan, thank you so much for finally I'm so glad that you know I've got time in your calendar.

Help me out. Look what they've done to my face. And you just completely, give us an idea on that because, unfortunately some people have had [00:12:00] treatments where it's just not gone well for various reasons. And then you come in the silver bullet.

Sheridan: I don't know. That's a difficult one, isn't it?

I don't tend to touch them, unfortunately.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Because it becomes my liability and I don't want to, I'm so busy with creating things from scratch that I don't want to start fiddling around with trying to correct other people's work. Also, the problem is the industry's not regulated, so there's hundreds of fillers coming in, and they're coming from China, Russia, all these places bought online cheapest chips.

No one knows what's in them. Probably made in somebody's shed and packaged beautifully and sold on the internet, and, no one knows. They haven't gone through any kind of testing, most likely. I don't know. I don't use 'em, so I don't know. But they, so for me to then go in to an area that's been treated with a product that I know nothing about, you could create a reaction or I just don't want, I just don't wanna do it.

I just don't wanna go there. It's just difficult.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: And I'm very fussy about my work somebody's gone there, they've [00:13:00] already created something.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: And then I have to try and uncreate it. It's just easier just to go and get it dissolved and then I see them.

Arthur: As you've given us an idea, people come and see you at different times in their life for different reasons. Can you tell us about the transformation that you see the positive, it's like an injection hit where you must give them and they walk out the door like, here I am. Or maybe it's the five days later where,

Sheridan: yeah. That happens.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: But they, equally, they can look in the mirror and think, oh my God, I think I've ever done the lips or something. 'cause the swelling.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: And then it goes down and it's beautiful. Yeah. It looks really nice and natural, but Yeah. I get a lot of texts saying, thank you so much.

I absolutely love your work. They're really happy. But Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. 'cause people just get on with their lives, don't they? Yeah. They send a little message. But I think the fact is that people don't contact me and say, oh, I'm so distraught. I've made a mistake.

I never get that. Yeah. So [00:14:00] I assume that they're all happy.

Arthur: Do you have people coming in and saying they want X and Y and then you advise them? Actually, no. I recommend this and that. Yeah.

Sheridan: I think now. They've seen, a lot of people have seen my work on Instagram my patients aren't irrational people.

So I have a lot of lawyers.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: What else? I have a lot of police officers actually yeah. I have lots of people in the. Media, entertainment world, and then lots of people in marketing.

So they're quite careful. People who wouldn't just nip into the local place, down the road on their way home and just get a quick lip filler, so they do a lot of research and then none of 'em come in and say, I've been following you for months or even years. So they know what they want and they get an idea. Because also our Instagram, we try and make it quite informative for patients. So if you put it there, it does that. So a lot of 'em come in and say, oh yeah, I understand if you put it there, it does that dah.

So they they it's quite collaborative.

Arthur: [00:15:00] Yeah. Where do you think this comes from? Because at the end of the day, you know what you're doing. You're really empowering people and really helping them position themselves to be the best version of themselves in the world. And you did your masters in

And nursing midwife.

A midwifery midwife.

Sheridan: Yeah.

Arthur: Caring for people. Is there a backstory to that?

Sheridan: Not really,

Arthur: no.

Sheridan: Just like it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I love to say, yeah, I had a dying hamster as an I looked after and was dramatized.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: No, I is just, it's quite fun, it's quite fun. It's upbeat. You know what I was going to do clinical psychology. I studied psychology. I was gonna do clinical. I got a place to do study clinical postgraduate, and I was gonna be a clinical psychologist, but then I thought, oh.

God, I actually couldn't have been a clinical psychologist. I just I just couldn't, I couldn't have done that. I just, and I take my hat onto people who, because I think it's quite, it's internalizing a lot of [00:16:00]negativity and although you help people, it's quite difficult. It's, you need a lot of emotional reserve to do that job, but my job's very, it's very positive,

Arthur: yeah.

Sheridan: It's like people just said, measure saying, I'm so happy, I'm so happy. So it's like it's great.

Arthur: We know where to come for that.

Sheridan: Yeah, it's great.

Arthur: So when you see people on the street, your mind must be quite busy when you are looking at people's faces and it seems more of beauty and obviously beauty.

I

Sheridan: always have done that, haven't you? Yeah. Don't

Arthur: people in a different way to you. I know there's no way that someone as primitive as me could notice these details on people.

Sheridan: I notice beauty, which lots of people probably wouldn't see as beauty. I see a woman passes me or a man and.

I see. I said, she looks so beautiful. She's got a lovely bone structure. Yeah. You know what, I saw a patient update and she said, oh, I want this 'cause I hate my nose. I said, I love your nose. She had this really amazing nose. It was like Roman nose and it was just so beautiful.

It was like something from a painting and, but she didn't like [00:17:00] it. She wants a little kind of turned up thing. So beauty is everything really something, it can be anything.

It's also beauty of the i of the beholder.

Or as my mother would say, beauty is the i of the behavior, don't they? As I scream at my brothers.

Arthur: I feel like people have never, ever looked so good.

Sheridan: Oh, really?

Arthur: Do you think that's true?

Sheridan: No, do you know the thing about today, right now? Yeah. Is that people have all these options. They have dating sites and no one's in a relationship.

People have access to all these things to make themselves look beautiful, but they don't look, I think in the sixties, if you look at the icons and they, even people, Kate was, yeah, but if you even look at things, people like, I don't know, you can. You can just look at all the old photographs and they were stunning, but they had a quirkiness about the face.

It didn't have everything. And when people start measuring and making it all oh, there must be this, but, [00:18:00] and they try to make the face so perfect. It's so boring. No, I don't think people have ever looked, so I think that most of 'em look awful, to be honest with you.

Arthur: Yeah,

Sheridan: no, take that back.

I don't think most people look awful. Most people look lovely, but if they have too much work or the wrong work, they look awful.

Arthur: Yeah. That's

Sheridan: no, I think it's, yeah. I think people are very self-obsessed at the moment, aren't they? They're very,

Arthur: yeah.

Sheridan: Like,

Arthur: and as you say, what can we have noticed?

Sometimes you see people who are aesthetically great, but you can just tell it's what you alluded to. There are some people that have this like inner confidence and it doesn't matter what they,

Sheridan: or they're funny. Or they're funny or they're quirky or

Arthur: they're, and they're so attractive that energy.

Sheridan: Yeah, I think it's energy. You're right. It's that which is almost like you can't put your finger up. Positive energy.

Arthur: Yeah,

Sheridan: I think that's right. I think people can, it's about energy, when people have got this really positive energy, it's very addictive. It's very charismatic, isn't it?

And someone can be as beautiful, but if they're negative or unhappy in their life, it doesn't [00:19:00]resonate as beautiful. Always Does it really?

Arthur: Yeah, totally. And you'll see that impact on them, aesthetically like people. It must change the way people look as they get older, if they're, if they're light in a certain way, they don't carry attention a certain way. Maybe they age slightly better in some ways, maybe not.

Sheridan: Yeah, I think so. Yeah, I think it's just genes, isn't it? Yeah. And lifestyle and what life is thrown at you, you could just have lots of bad luck.

Some people just have a lot of really bad luck. Yeah. Don't they? They just I feel, they have a. A partner that they love dies or a child is ill or something, and it's completely out of their control and it can affect the way they look,

Arthur: yeah. Completely.

Sheridan: Or they're just decadent.

Arthur: Yeah,

Sheridan: yeah. Or they're just quite out partying every night. Yeah.

Arthur: Yeah. And somehow looking incredible. You're thinking Earth.

Sheridan: Yeah. Or look awful.

Arthur: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's true.

Sheridan: Yeah, the old Botox thing and just wipe, people used to say, don't say anymore. I don't think so much 'cause anybody drinks anymore.

But they used to say things like, oh yeah, I have a bottle of wine, but I know I [00:20:00] can have the Botox and, all the, to just wipe it all away

Arthur: And I think it's a good opportunity to hear some advice you have for people. Maybe it's related to skin or beauty in general.

Do you have any thoughts to share?

Sheridan: I think people are pretty wise up about the skin at the moment. Yeah, there's so many products out there and there's so many products which are. Accessible, financially accessible for people. There's really pr good brands that a really reasonable price.

And then there's really expensive.

And there's so much information to actually dissect the ingredients. And there's also apps where you can just go and it can tell you the rating out of a hundred, whether it's good for you. So it's skin, treat skincare. It's clean products, creams and things.

It's not really my bag because it's just a whole world on its own. And it's been really well covered. But , what I do is I sculpt the face and so I tend to say to people, if you imagine it's like [00:21:00] approach to anti-aging is like four different pillars. The surgery, which, some people don't want, some people need and don't want, don't have.

And then there's bot, also anti-wrinkle treatments, which are standalone for the upper part of the face. And then there's structural work, which I do, which is fillers and structuring the cheeks and the lips and everything. And then there's skincare and the under that you can have things like, microneedling. You can have things like various different lasers. You can have PRP where you take your blood, separate it, you inject into the skin to the growth factors. You can have things like skin boosters, and then you can have skincare, which can be prescription strength, going right down to what you can pick up in super drunk or boots.

So I think it's understanding. What's your specialty in that sort of area? And that's my specialty, is the structure, the sculpting of the face. It's just evolved [00:22:00] like that.

Arthur: When you were with the band, the Botox that was in the us was that was in the US right?

Sheridan: Yeah, it was here and there. Yeah, it was here and also in Miami.

Arthur: Yeah. There must be some quirky stories. Oh,

Sheridan: God stories. God, there's some fantastic stories.

Oh. Found out. But I can't tell him.

Because they're confidential.

But yeah, really you can Google him, you can see who his patients were and he, to. Fly them. She used to fly him over and I'd listen to the conversations and the music videos that were going on at time and all the people, and they're just referred to by, on first name basis and all the conversations.

Yeah, it was very entertaining. It was really interesting. But he was lovely because we became really good friends and he was quite a celebrity in himself. I'd assist him with this patient in London he would take me out with him to all these different events that he was invited to.

And then one that the Rolling Stones were there. And another one was for Damien Hurs at the skull that, that Donna's skull. That was an amazing party, and he was very generous. He was very generous at this time and, really appreciated me. [00:23:00] And yeah, it was great.

Really sad that he died. He committed suicide, which is tragic. Really?

Arthur: Yeah. And you must in meeting so many different people

Have you got friendships through your,

Sheridan: your life? Yeah, some,

Arthur: yeah.

Sheridan: It's a sort of yeah, it's a tricky one because, it's a professional relationship.

Yeah. But yeah.

Patience. Invite me to weddings and invite me to parties and invite me, and some I go to, some don't. But it's nice.

Arthur: What do you think are the hidden privileges of doing what you do?

Sheridan: My patients are so lovely. They're so lovely. I'm really blessed with my patients. Many of them been coming to me and some of them say, I've been coming to you for 20 years. And then they say, oh no, I've been coming 25. They've been coming to me for a really long time.

And it's so lovely 'cause we just catch up, where we left off, whether it was six months before or a year, or even five years before. 'cause some of 'em get married, have babies, and they can't have treatments and stuff while they're pregnant, whatever. And they're busy and [00:24:00] then they come back and it's, yeah, we pick up where we left off.

Really?

Arthur: Yeah.

One question you wish more patients asked you.

Sheridan: One question. What is in, what is the product made of? What is the safety profile of that pa, of that product? How long has it been going? They never ask me about the product. I tell them. 'cause it's really important and I give them, I'm trying to inform them about what's going in their tissue.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: That's one thing.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Things like, for example, what are the safety risks? Have you ever had anybody's come and had a, which I haven't had a, something where they want me to send them for a biopsy or something, because the people are just getting stuff ejections in their faces, isn't they?

They don't know what's going in their faces. Not in my practice, but, stuff that's been walked over, work from wherever,

Arthur: yeah. The word of lips.

Is there anything you'd like to share about the lip world?

Sheridan: No, not really.

Arthur: No.

Sheridan: Just don't do it. If you do it really naturally.

Make sure the product's top [00:25:00] quality don't over inject and don't have it done in the back of somebody's car. Apparently somebody have it done in the back of somebody's car.

Arthur: Yeah. I heard some day.

Sheridan: Unbelievable.

Arthur: A lip fitting party.

Sheridan: Yeah. But that's bad. But to have it down in the back of somebody's car Yeah.

Is like what?

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: It's a, not a, it's not a, it's a serious intervention is a product where you're injecting into tissue. There's blood, there's all sorts of things involved and it, it is just. My people don't take it seriously.

Arthur: And the products, the technology must be changing quite quickly.

Not really. Is it?

Sheridan: It's pretty much the same as it, there was a burst of things.

And yeah, of course product companies always trying to grab the market. But actually, you've got products which have been around 30, 40 years and they've got such amazing research and safety profile, and they're pure as well, pure hyaluronic acid, so integrate into tissue really well [00:26:00] and that you can't go far wrong with those.

Arthur: Yeah.

But it is more accessible the, these treatments, these days, right?

Sheridan: It's everywhere, isn't it?

Arthur: Yeah, it's

Sheridan: everywhere.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: It's literally everywhere. In fact. It's every week almost. There's a new clinics spring up, isn't there?

Arthur: Yeah.

Have you ever done quite reconstructive work for people who've had a maybe a car accident?

Yeah.

That must be quite emotional.

Sheridan: Yeah, there's a really she's been a she was a model for me on one of my Instagram and she's very beautiful and she had a very bad car accident.

And actually I was, yeah, actually I've had three patients who've had car accidents and infected their lip. But this girl, in particularly, she lost lot of teeth and everything, but she's very beautiful and I've done some work on her as well. Yeah. And she looks lovely.

Arthur: People must have a sense that they, always owe.

They, they can't give you what they feel they owe you for what you've done to them. Really. That must have, and that must have,

Sheridan: I don't know about that. I don't know. [00:27:00] I don't know. I just get the, they just, I suppose if I say I'm gonna retire, then they get a bit like, what am I gonna do? No, you can't retire that.

That's when they get a little bit, so sometimes I say that because I'm just a kind of get 'em to appreciate me. I realize how much I'm appreciated. Yeah.

I'm not gonna retire, but I just throw that one in occasionally and I get the response I'm looking for.

Arthur: And can you give us an idea of the process, like with the needle, would

Sheridan: you like to be a Marty one day for us?

Arthur: Oh. In what sense?

Sheridan: Come in and we'll treat you. Not, you look great, so you don't need too much

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Treatment. But why didn't you come in so you can experience the whole thing?

Arthur: Why not?

Sheridan: Yeah. Great. Why didn't you do that?

Arthur: Why not? I've had one thing done.

Do

Arthur: you know what that is?

Sheridan: No.

Arthur: you want me to give you Okay.

Sheridan: Yeah. Pinoplasty.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Did you?

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Who did it for you?

Arthur: It was done. A very famous guy in on, in Marvin I can find out the name. He's top

Sheridan: it's a really [00:28:00] good, it's a really good treatment, isn't it?

Arthur: It's, but it's it's funny because how

Sheridan: good did you have it done?

Arthur: I had it done when I was 16 and it was life changing because it meant that something I was really subconscious about.

I would no longer be concerned about, I could have my hair cut, whatever,

Length.

And for, so many of your patients, there'll be things you do that really change

Sheridan: Yeah. How they feel. I think things like, yeah. Really skinny lips are very difficult to create.

But they do make an impact. And also sometimes people have a very, weak chin, receding chin and putting bit chin filler in can look, can be really, that can really change somebody's confidence,

Arthur: and do people want different looks? Do you have people telling you how they want to,

Sheridan: not really.

Not really. They just want to look like the better version of them. I think they realize that's not my bag, that I'm not that sort of practitioner that. Stamps out. Oh, that's the look, I, there's a, everyone looks, I don't like that they, I, they know that I'm, I want, I only really like [00:29:00] natural.

Where you just bring out, don't change the person. You just make it look like a better version of themselves.

Arthur: We are going to move to the quickfire question.

A few quirky things that give you joy.

Sheridan: Walking and seeing that give me joy in my life.

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: Seeing how funny my, how my dog can't bear my child. That makes me laugh. Because they're supposed to be golden doodles are supposed to adore children and the way the baby tries so hard to enchant the dog and just occasionally she'd respond.

She wouldn't never harm the baby, don't get me wrong. But the way she's just, she's oh God, where does this come from? I don't, I had such a peaceful life before. That makes me laugh.

Arthur: Change.

Sheridan: Yeah. Mind you, they're getting a bit better together. Yeah.

Arthur: A mantra you want to embrace now.

Sheridan: Accept yourself, love yourself. Value what you've got now.

I think that's three, isn't it? That's a bit. You only asked for [00:30:00] one. Not there. No, they're the same. They're all on the

Arthur: same nine. There's no complain. A favorite book, film or artist that isn't obvious.

Sheridan: Maria Canis.

Arthur: Something you wish you knew when you were younger,

Sheridan: that everything changes. Everything will be all right?

Arthur: Yeah,

Sheridan: everything works out in the end,

Arthur: We're gonna have two things that are in for you right now and two things that are out for you.

Hot right now. Not hot right now, type vibe.

Sheridan: I love South France, but that's,

Arthur: that's

Sheridan: always been, that's always been in, hasn't it?

Arthur: Yeah.

Sheridan: I love it as, as much as it's changing, like London is fabulous. That's what I love.

Arthur: And out

Sheridan: out Okay. Out trainers for women, although I'm wearing them,

Arthur: so brilliant.

That's so brilliant

Sheridan: in high shoes. Let's get some high shoes back. Girls. I've got a stack of them. I wanna be able to wear them and not look like I'm standing out. And I will this summer. I think high shoes are fabulous.

Arthur: Yeah. Sheridan, thank you so much for

Sheridan: Oh you're most welcome.

Arthur: Being [00:31:00] here today and giving us your time.

Sheridan: It's been really enjoyable.

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