Sotd : Saturday 9th to friday 15 November 2019

10/11/19

Soap - Palmolive Stick
Brush - Omega 80265
Razor - Ball End Tech
Blade - Astra SP (5)
Post - Witch Hazel
Balm - Nivea Replenishing
AS - Akcay Tobacco

I'd recently retired one of the 2 Omega 80265's I own (the other was retired a while back) as for I couldn't get the brush to hold a lather, irrespective of whether it was cleaned with vinegar, soaked, shampoo'd, ritual dance etc. It used to be a brush I really enjoyed using but I'd taken the brush out of my rotation and it put into the cupboard of shame.
On B&B in a thread about soaking boar brushes I came across a post about soaking a boar that no longer holds a lather in distilled water, and thought this particular avenue might be worth an attempt, but instead of using distilled water I used the water from my dehumidifier and soaked the brush for a while, then washed it out with washing liquid and gave it a comb and like some weird black magic for today's shave the brush worked a treat!
Really superb shave as well today, had more than enough lather for the 2.5 passes today and the blade seemed to glide across my face. I forgot how sharp a Astra SP can actually be.

Anyway chaps, I hope you've had an enjoyable weekend so far.
 
Sotd - technically it is Sunday the 10th of November but I haven't slept since Friday night.

Razor - ER Streamline
blade - ER vintage (very definitely lost count - but still fine.)
brush - Chubby 1 - best
soap - Wickham - Apricus - vegetarian
post - witch hazel
a/s - Myrsol Limon
balm - Wickham - Apricus
scent - later on - Dior Sauvage - edp.

Result - great.

Unusually early shave for me - gives you something to do when the insomnia kicks in. Todo bueno - tried and tested ingredients - I'll put the scent on later. In the sleepless hours I wrote something - filled the time in a productive way. I had been discussing this text with a friend here recently elsewhere - @Barry Giddens - following is a more elaborated version of my thoughts. If you want to take the time to read it I thank you - if not - I don't mind at all. It has nothing at all to do with shaving - yours - hoping most of you are sleeping soundly - depending on where you live in the world - I.

‘The Meditations' of Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus - (b. 26/4/121 - d. 17/3/180 ce) - Roman emperor
(r.-161-180 ce) - soldier and Stoic philosopher.

Aurelius - half Spanish and half Italian - by modern definition - was the last emperor of the period known as the ‘Pax Romana' - a time of relative stability - note the word - relative - the system he inherited was dependent on some degree of expansion at all times - and therefore - conflict. He had to deal with a resurgent Parthian empire in the east - and probably was the first to properly understand that the noisome myriad of Germanic tribes were going to end up as an existential crisis for the ‘augusti' that would follow him - which they did. His ‘Meditations,' are contained in twelve sections - composed in Greek - each drawn from a separate period in the author's life - it is non-linear in chronology - it is not a book in the modern sense - more ‘notes to self' - on how to deal with the trials of life - and remain a good man - in form they run from long paragraphs - to single sentences - like this -

‘Often injustice lies in what you aren't doing, not only in what you are doing.' - IX.5.

It is not actually called ‘The Meditations,' - it never originally had a title - as it wasn't intended to be published - or read by anyone except Aurelius - the name has just stuck - suitable enough - I think. There is no doubt that he was deeply sincere in his quest to live the good Stoic life - which begs the fairly obvious question - why become emperor? Not a position known for its association with a virtuous life - less than ideal for a man more given to quiet contemplation? - he addressed this issue himself - regarding accepting the title as his duty. He felt he had no choice in the matter - being largely born to it - his ‘fate.'

‘Be like a rocky promontory against which the restless surf continually pounds; it stands fast while the churning sea is lulled to sleep at its feet. I hear you say, "How unlucky that this should happen to me!" Not at all! Say instead, "How lucky that I am not broken by what has happened and am not afraid of what is about to happen. The same blow might have struck anyone, but not many would have absorbed it without capitulation or complaint.' - IV.49.

Stoicism is a Hellenistic form of philosophy and derives from the teaching of Zeno of Citium - technically Phoenician by his place of birth - in the 3rd century bce - it was immediately popular in his time - and underwent development - subsequently - taken up by the Roman elite - before Aurelius - Seneca - principally - as close to an original thinker as the empire produced - he - to some degree expanded the ideas - Aurelius was a student - the Romans were great at building stuff - we still use their roads - and having battles - but very poor with intellectual innovation - it fell to the wayside after Constantine Christianised the empire in the 4th century ce. In my opinion - it was heavily influenced by the earlier Cynics - with the central tenet of living in harmony with nature as the way to happiness. The name Stoic derives from a ‘painted colonnade' - a ‘stoa' - such as was found at the northern end of the ‘agora' in Athens - where Zeno discussed matters with his students - unlike Plato and Aristotle he didn't have the funds to teach indoors. It was - and remains - a complete philosophical system - underpinned by a distinct form of physics, logic and ethics.

‘A person who doesn't know what the universe is, doesn't know who they are. A person who doesn't know their purpose in life doesn't know who they are or what the universe is. A person who doesn't know any of these things doesn't know why they are here. So what to make of people who seek or avoid the praise of those who have no knowledge of where or who they are?' VIII.52.

The basics - the universe/nature/god - be careful with the last of the interchangeable terms - they used it - but meant a completely different thing to the way we might understand it today - is a reasoning entity - sentient - eternal but also - confusingly - cyclical at the same time. The world we experience is made up of two types of matter - the passive - available for any purpose - that needs to be mixed with the active - the ‘logos' - universal reason - they also called it ‘fate' - but again that is problematic if you speak modern English - it has shifted considerably in meaning - observe the transit from the Latin ‘fides' to ‘faith,' for example. Individuals are perishable - we come from the void and return there after but a short time. There is no space for heaven or hell in the system - we resort to the primal matter we are composed of. Rubbed out - start again - and not in the sense of reincarnation - as you would have in Buddhism - rather - a return to the atomic - complete dissolution.

‘Of the life of man the duration is but a point.' - II.17.

So - what does this all mean? - good question. There is no value in trying to live a life that does not understand ‘nature,' - their meaning - not ours - to do so would be folly and inviting unhappiness - such things as anger, pain, fame and wealth are transient illusions that a wise man can put aside - to the Stoic - they are simply irrelevant - considered - then left behind. The key thing about Stoicism is to live a good life - one's behaviour controlled by wisdom, courage, justice and temperance - the cardinal virtues. It is an entirely practical system - in my opinion - I would venture - more relevant now than ever - we live in a culture that has discarded some fairly obvious truths - one largely predicated on the sensory illusions Stoicism points out - the fallacy of - happiness achievable through - need - consumption - vanity - novelty - avarice - hubris - the destruction of the ‘universe' - our biosphere - we all live in Macfarlane's ‘Anthropocene' now. A nightmare vision of Yuval Noah Harari - horribly twisted on dangerous drugs. Algorithms - like germs to the Greeks - an enemy we can neither see, understand nor fight.

The last words - of course will be for Aurelius - I will try and remember this - the next time I go out into the world - ‘bat country' - and the ‘rat bastard psychotics' set about me again - thank you - I.

‘When you wake up in the morning, tell yourself: The people I deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, dishonest, jealous, and surly. They are like this because they can't tell good from evil. But I have seen the beauty of good, and the ugliness of evil, and have recognised that the wrongdoer has a nature related to my own—not of the same blood or birth, but the same mind, and possessing a share of the divine.' - II.1.
Brilliantly done Iain. I will be picking your brain even further in the next few days.
 
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Excellent shave with a Yaqi Grace Razor I received on a passaround on another board. Razor shave was smooth and moderately efficient. I have it for a few more days. I like the scalloped head and open comb. I'm going to skip a shave tomorrow and see what it's like with a heavier growth of whiskers.

SOTD 11/10/19

RAZOR: Yaqi Grace with scalloped head and open comb
BLADE: Voskhod
PRESHAVE: Cold water rinse followed by scrub w/ PAA's Charcoal-Menthol Preshave Soap
BRUSH: WCS Best Badger
SOAP: Mike's Hungarian Lavender
POSTSHAVE: Cold water wash w/ Mike's Hungarian Lavender followed by Old Spice Fresh Lime AS Splash and finished w/ Pre De Provence AS Balm
 
Sunday AM 2019-11-10

Moss Anniversary Slate scuttle
Rooney 1/3 Ebony Finest (26/52)
Acqua di Parma Colonia soft shaving soap (v.1)
Wolfman WR1-OC Brass 0.61/Bob's Razor Works Black Bull Mastiff
Gillette Platinum 'Swede' (6)
Acqua di Genova 1853 aftershave
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Sunday, 10 November 2019 A Floris Day

PreShave: Warm to hot water, most from the boiled kettle some from the tap
Cream: Floris 89
Brush: Kent BK8
Bowl: My recycled T&H cream bowl
Razor: The Sledgehammer (Merkur 39C)
Blade Astra Platinum (1)
Post Shave: Alum

Fragrance: Floris 89


A fine, three-pass shave for a good start to the day. Enjoy what remains of the weekend, and have a great week, folks.
 
Remembrance Sunday SOTD

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I've kindly been sent a Razorock Eco on a forum pass around by @neilwf and have also been sent some Bart's Balms products to trial by the manufacturer, @BartsBalm

Today was my third use of the razor and I continued with the Voskhod blade I used yesterday. The razor isn't the smoothest razor I've ever used and I found my first shave with it (using a Shark blade) to be a little on the rough side. Using the Voskhod has improved this. However, this remains a pretty aggressive razor and it is not one I could use daily.

I used it for a head shave and this is where it's aggressiveness and lack of smoothness was apparent. I ended up with a close, but rather uncomfortable, shave.

I stared the shave by trying some of Bart's aftershave lotion (which consists of Coconut oil, Argan oil, Peppermint essential oil, and Limonene) and found the consistency to be a little too thin to work well as a pre-shave oil.

His beard oil, by comparison is an excellent pre-shave oil and is up there with the best on the market).

Following the shave I used Bart's Peppermint balm on my face and the aftershave lotion on my head. The balm is another excellent product and the aftershave lotion worked really well on my head. I tried using the aftershave lotion on my face yesterday and it felt a bit too oily for my liking so I opted for the balm instead.

All in all, it was a pretty good shave and it was great to have the opportunity to try out these products on what is a very poignant day which bought back a number of memories.

One of these memories was that of my first ever wet shave as a 17 year old, which was performed whilst on exercise, using normal soap, a bic disposable razor, cold water in a mess tin and the wing mirror of a Land Rover.

‘They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted,
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them'.
 
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