>>20165585>>20165587No.
My beard hair grows thick and fast. It is high maintenance to remain shaved.
I look more attractive and professional with my beard, as evidenced by compliments male and female. Therefore, for me, wearing a beard is more both efficient and has better results. Professionals take me more seriously (though I am in my 30s, I get mistaken for a college student without my beard), and women want to touch and feel it, which irritates my wife, and is fun for me.
> as a manly manNo true manly man would say that he is one. He would just say he is a man, like any other.
> without a standard of dress imposed upon you by a jobWhat arbitrary and capricious reasoning. No so-called "manly man" would be making decisions based on the expectations imposed in wage-cuckery, implying they have some sort of control over your personal identity. Take me as I am, or don't take me at all. In fact, wage-cucking is fundamentally subservient, and while you have to do it occasionally, by the time you are a grown man, there is little use for the "selling my labor to an employer" model. Selling your labor is infinitely more appropriate to be called "the height of faggotry" -- polishing someone else's assets for their table crumbs, begging for their acceptance, changing your appearance to suit them rather than suit yourself.
With that said, the queer in OP is not wearing a beard correctly. It expands out into a horrific circular shape. It is supposed to follow and enhance the contours of your face. He is also wearing a "cuban link" wigger chain. Consequently, this man looks like he is late for his shift at the Amazon warehouse because his salvage title Honda Civic blew a piston on the way to the ICP concert and now he has to take the bus.
Included is an example of a classical, timeless beard styling that is mature, professional, low maintenance, aesthetic and goes back centuries.