If I had a quid for every time I’ve had a beard compliment, I’d be a millionaire. Case in point, I finished work early last Friday and went to the pub; two men got talking to me about my beard.
Bro 100% agree. Love the random interactions with stranger that talk about the beard. The key is to have it looking nice like you said. I feel like my beard style is very similar to yours when I trim it. However I cannot beat your stache bro it's just epic.
I get awkward when complimented on mg beard I don't receive compliments well if i agree i feel as though I'm being arrogant or cocky. Best part of growing a beard is when i go down on my wife she likes the feeling of the stache now that it's grown out, she hated beards now tells me she couldn't picture me without one and says I'm not allowed to shave cause it would ruin the fun lol
Very wonderful video. Thank you for the content. I have found my beard is the equivalent of a child with a mask, I feel like a new person and use that to be far more outgoing and assertive.
"Well now, let’s put aside the main works of nature, and consider those of a more incidental character. Could anything be more useless than the hairs on one’s chin? And yet, hasn’t nature put these, too, to the most appropriate use that she could? Hasn’t she distinguished the male from the female by this means? With regard to each of us, doesn’t nature cry out aloud from afar, ‘I’m a man, and it’s with that in mind that you should approach me-no need to enquire any further, the signs are plain to see.’ And again, in the case of women, just as nature has mixed a gentler note into their voices, she has likewise deprived them of facial hair. Oh no, the human animal should rather have been left without any distinguishing signs, so that each of us would have had to proclaim, ‘I’m a man!’ But what a fine sign this is, how fitting and how distinguished! How much finer than a cock’s comb, and more majestic than a lion’s mane! It is thus only right to preserve the signs that have been conferred on us by God; we should neither cast them aside nor, so far as possible, confuse the sexes that he has distinguished." The Discourses of Epictetus, compiled by a pupil of his, Arrian. 1.16.9-14