(this post is part of an aborted 1 year experiment in material abstinence I called The Necessary Year)
Ah, fashion.
It used to be the height of good taste and breeding in our culture to sport a full, luxuriant beard. Now such a thing is typically seen only on those who hearken to our society’s more colorful periphery.
For those of us who can grow such a personal decoration, and whom wish to stay within the bounds of fashionable taste, this means shaving.
Oh, the joy of shaving! Who among us does not savor the early-morning opportunity to scrape stiff hair from some of the most delicate skin on their body with razor-sharp steel? (I remain thankful that portions of my skull are all I’ve ever felt the need to shave on a daily basis – my condolences to those who must shave their pits – and/or lower – on a regular basis. Yikes!)
And the options! Straight razor. Safety razor. Disposable razor. Electric razor. Laser depilation.
I’ve owned an electric razor since I was 12, which means that, by the time I started needing it (at 17), it had seen better days, having been used for a number of now long-forgotten but undoubtedly harebrained, alternative activities its designers never conceived of. Consequently, after trying and failing to remove the pre-beard peach fuzz from my cheeks with said device, I had to ask my mother if she had a spare razor I could use.
She did – a semi-modern shaver that accepted razor cartridges.
I have since replaced my first electric razor with a newer model and use it for those times I go completely off my nut and shave my entire head for months at a time but, for daily facial care, I still use that same, spare, safety razor handle my mother gave me (she might say lent – hah!) over 20 years ago.
The cartridge options have changed, though.
When I first started using the thing, I could find either single or double blade cartridges that would fit the handle. Then the single blade cartridges went the way of the dodo, which was fine because I bought into that whole “mo’ bettah blades” marketing scheme when I was still a teen.
Not so much so that I got into triple-blade cartridges. Triple-blade? You ever price them mommas? Yeesh …
After a number of years they began marketing the cartridges with or without a little white “comfort strip” which is some kind of soapy/waxy crap affixed to the head of the razor just behind the blades so that it smooches over your freshly raw-ified skin with each pass of the razor, supposedly pulling double-duty as a skin soother and blood coagulator.
I was a manly-man as a young, dumb punk however, and eschewed such niceties, considering them unnecessary to the point of fruitiness. I mean, come on: we’re shaving our beards, here!
Eventually I accidentally bought a package of them – while in a sort of a mad, grocery-store panic I suppose – and only realized my mistake once I got home and unbagged my purchases.
Too lazy to take them back, I decided to go ahead and use them.
Reasoning that the comfort strip removed about half of the need for squirting shaving cream all over your face, I tried shaving using water only – and I was about half right. But half right doesn’t shave your face and I was back to the regular cartridges and shaving cream shortly thereafter.
Until they quit selling the cartridges without the comfort strip, that is.
When I first began shaving, I would use a razor once, maybe twice before throwing it out and snapping on a new one. Then I realized how much the damned things cost me and I’d keep shaving with the same one until the process became more like using tweezers than a blade, the blood beading up on my face like crimson dew.
For TNY, I have attempted to be more scientific about it. I now use my comfort stripped, twin-bladed cartridge for five days in a row, starting fresh each Monday, wearing it down to a dull-edged frazzle by Friday, and knocking off the practice entirely for the weekends.
I figure this utilizes the full-potential of the disposable razor’s life and also gives my face a chance to take a two-day breather from the dehydrating and depilating, lather-scrape routine.
With ten cartridges per package, and each package coming out at around $8 (I buy the in-house brand, none of this fancy-schmancy name-brand stuff) that’s two and a half months of shaving at .80ยข a week. Not bad (I’ve no idea how much a squirt of shaving cream or the water costs – leave me alone).
Further, I use hot water only for the initial moistening of my face – for the rest of my shaving routine I use cold water, a habit I picked up not out of economy but from a bit of last-minute advice from Johnny Caspar (Miller’s Crossing); the theory being that cold water causes the steel to contract, giving you a sharper edge and, thus, a closer shave. I don’t know how valid this theory is but it makes me feel as smart as Johnny Caspar, so I do it.
I recently attempted to submit a picture of myself for a trade publication at the request of my boss. I sent in the best picture I had of myself: a kind of cheesy glamor shot I captured a couple of years ago in a digital photography class. Me, my knuckles, and a nicely groomed beard.
My boss was not amused: “You don’t have a beard! I’ll take a picture of you next week,” she emailed back.
“Oh, but I do have a beard,” I countered, “it is just internal at the moment. I have to shave it every day but, I assure you, it is there. My driver’s license features me with a beard. I frequently grow a beard during the winter.”
“You are not,” she replied, “going to grow a beard.”
You look like you’re punching yourself in the chin (of course your beard is taking the brunt of it).
Thanks for the chuckle!
The next picture in the series shows me picking my teeth out of the carpet while I stand over myself, smirking.
Hey! I use those same double blade cartridges w/ the strip too. I use ’em on the old melon as well as the visage. Works like a charm. And yes, I still have the ‘handle’ part from like 20-25 years ago too.
What fun!
When pulling a Telly, I touch up the ol’ pate-sheen with a safety razor but, as stated in the post, prefer an electric for the main job.
I find, that, with the razor alone, I am too prone to stripping the skin from my head like peeling old wallpaper. So pleasant.
A similarly minded, cue-ball fan told me he used an electric razor for his perfectly polished appearance and I have found that, after having completed the initial whacking, I prefer said method as well.
You were well in my mind when I wrote this post, K. If I recall correctly, you could shave two and a half times a day, then blast the stumps? I’m blowing dandelion seeds in comparison. Sheesh.
LMAO! This has got to be one of the funnier things I have read. I love that your boss forbids you to grow a beard.
I myself view beards as only looking appropriate on Rabbi’s and creepy stalker men; of course only when paired with a pair of aviator sunglasses. (works well for stalker Rabbi’s)
๐
btw: that picture doesn;t even look like you. I had to stare at it for like 10 seconds until I could actually see you under the beard. ๐
> I love that your boss forbids you to grow a beard.
I don’t know about loving it but I do find it interesting – telling, even – that she believes she has the right to such a level of control over me. I wonder what other personal choices I am forbidden? I’d better consult the ol’ employee manual …
> I had to stare at it for like 10 seconds until I could actually see you under the beard.
You think you have it bad from your side, imagine mine; like peering out through a carpet!