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The relationship between daily routines, identity, and mental wellbeing is well-documented. Shaving sits at the centre of it — more than most men have ever been told, or allowed themselves to admit.
This is the article that most grooming publications will not write. Not because the science does not exist — it does, and it is compelling — but because it asks men to acknowledge something that our culture has historically made difficult: that a five-minute morning ritual in the bathroom genuinely affects how you feel for the rest of the day, and that this effect is neurological, not cosmetic. It is not vanity. It is biology. And it matters more during difficult periods than any other time.
This guide does not present shaving as a cure for mental health challenges. It presents it as what the research shows it to be: one component of the structured daily routine that supports mental resilience in men — and a surprisingly powerful one, given how little attention it receives in the conversation about men’s wellbeing.
WHAT THE RESEARCH ACTUALLY SHOWS
A systematic review of habit and routine research in men’s mental health found that the predictability and structure of a daily routine — independent of what the routine contained — was a significant protective factor against anxiety escalation. The mechanism is understood: predictable routine reduces the cognitive load of daily decision-making, freeing mental resources for higher-order challenges.
A survey of men who had experienced depressive episodes found grooming — particularly face-washing and shaving — was cited as one of the most frequently maintained activities during difficult periods, and one of the most reliably associated with feeling “like myself again” as recovery progressed.
Research into morning routines found that any focused, deliberate, completed activity in the first 30 minutes of the day — regardless of whether it was exercise, journaling, or grooming — was associated with improved self-reported mood through midday. The completion mechanism, not the specific activity, drove the benefit.
Research into identity maintenance under stress found that physical self-care rituals — particularly those involving the face, which is most closely associated with social identity — function as “identity anchors”: activities that reinforce a consistent sense of self when other markers of identity are destabilised by circumstances.
THE NEUROLOGICAL MECHANISM — WHY IT WORKS
The brain’s reward system releases a small amount of dopamine with every completed task — regardless of the task’s size or significance. A properly executed shave is a sequence of completable sub-tasks: preparation done, product applied, each zone shaved, rinse completed, balm applied. Each completed step is a micro-reward. The cumulative effect of completing a full shaving routine is a genuine, physiologically real dopamine contribution to the morning. This is not metaphorical. It is neurochemistry.
Shaving well requires a specific kind of focused attention — you cannot be fully absorbed in anxiety or rumination while simultaneously executing precise blade strokes across curved surfaces. This enforced present-moment attention functions identically to what mindfulness practices cultivate deliberately. Studies on focused manual tasks show measurable cortisol reduction compared to unstructured morning starts. The five minutes spent shaving attentively are five minutes not spent in the cortisol-elevating cognitive loops that characterise anxiety.
Shaving — particularly the face — is intimately connected to social identity and self-presentation. Completing this act sends a clear signal to the self: “I am functioning. I am engaging with the world. I am the person I recognise in the mirror.” This signal matters most precisely when other aspects of life feel uncertain or destabilised. It is not about looking good for others. It is about providing the brain with evidence of agency and continuity.
Research on resilience consistently identifies the maintenance of small, consistent routines as a protective factor during periods of stress, grief, or mental health challenge. The routine is not the cure. But it is the scaffold that holds the structure of a functioning day together when larger structures are under pressure. Men who maintain shaving through difficult periods consistently report it as one of the behaviours that helped preserve a sense of normality and self-continuity.
“I couldn’t control much during that period. But I could shave. And somehow, doing that one thing — being the version of me who takes care of himself — made it easier to do the next thing.”Composite of accounts from Men’s Health Forum UK recovery survey respondents
THE REVERSE SIGNAL — WHEN SHAVING STOPS
The relationship between grooming and mental health is bidirectional. In the same way that maintaining a shaving routine can support resilience, the decision to stop — or the inability to bring oneself to begin — is often one of the first observable signs that a man is struggling.
Clinicians working with men’s mental health consistently note that neglect of personal grooming, particularly shaving, is one of the most reliable early indicators of depression in men who were previously consistent. This is not a moral failing. It is a symptom — the motivational depletion and loss of self-directed care that depression produces, manifesting in one of the most daily and visible ways.
Inconsistent shaving in a previously consistent man is a reliable early indicator worth paying attention to — in yourself and in the men around you. Not a diagnosis. But a signal that a conversation might be needed.
For men rebuilding after a difficult period, returning to basic self-care routines — including shaving — is often prescribed as an early, achievable target by therapists. Small, completable acts of self-care rebuild the agency that depression depletes.
The cultural narrative that dismisses grooming as superficial actively harms men by making it harder to acknowledge that these routines contribute to mental resilience. They do. The research is clear. Acknowledging it is not weakness.
If you are struggling: This article is about the wellbeing dimension of routine grooming for men managing everyday stress. If you are experiencing persistent low mood, loss of interest in activities including self-care, or thoughts of self-harm, please reach out to your GP, contact CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably): 0800 58 58 58, or visit mind.org.uk. SmartShave believes in talking about this — and in pointing to proper support when it matters.
The five minutes spent shaving properly — attentively, deliberately, with a blade that works and products that feel good — is one of the highest-return investments in the start of a man’s day. Not because of how it makes you look to others, though that matters. Because of the neurochemical completion signal, the cortisol-reducing focused attention, the identity anchor, and the scaffold of a functioning day that a consistent morning ritual provides. SmartShave’s subscription removes one variable from that ritual — the blade is always fresh, always ready, always reliable. In difficult periods, reliability is everything.
