Can you be attracted to your own beard? Not the face it covers. Just the beard. My face is fine, I guess. Itβs a nose and some eyes and a mouth, like most faces. Iβm grateful for it. But Iβm not, like, thinking about boning it, like the way Iβd try to bone my Chewbacca pandemic beard, if such a thing were possible and socially acceptable.
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But since itβs not, Iβll settle for running my fingers through it while deep in thought in Zoom meetings. When I close my eyes, it feels like itβs being massaged by an angel sitting on my chest. A beard angel. A bangel.
It sits on my face, this contouring collaboration of oils, honey, Pittsburgh Nigga, grit, Jack Black, and good funk, and Iβm reminded sometimes of the first time I realized my beard could connect. I was 21. On a Greyhound from Buffalo to Pittsburgh. The bus smelled like Rice Krispie Treats. I had a window seat. And somewhere between Erie and Grove City, I noticed, in the windowβs reflection, that the converging lines of hair that inched towards each other from my sideburns and my flaccid goatee had finally touched. And I smiled at myself before realizing that it smelled like Rice Krispie Treats because the person sitting behind me was eating them with a knife and fork.
Since then, Iβve experimented with how to style the hair on my face, but Iβve never, not once, considered cutting it off. Iβve heard people say disparaging things about men with beards, that weβre hiding behind them to obscure unremarkable faces and uninspiring chins, and my response to that is always the same. Duh, my nigga. Without my beard I look like Iβm campaigning to be the mayor of a city with six people. I look like a man who changed his name to βLarry Lawrence Caldwellβ just so his initials would be βLLC.β I look like a nigga whoβs literally never been racially profiled. With my beard, however, I look like I eat grits everyday, and that brings me joy.
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