To Remove Ear Hair, or not to remove…
…that is the question.
Hair growing from your ears is one of those oddities that just seems to come with age. It could be that ear hair is one of those dormant genes reserved for manifestation only upon maturation of the average male. Maybe it’s just an evolutionary throwback to times when monkeys throwing feces at each other for amusement required some kind of protection for their hearing canals.
For the foreseeable future, ear hair is likely to remain with our species until body hair falls out of fashion as a sculpting medium. As a result, we are talking facial hair types on this blog so expanding the content to managing wild follicular growths on any surface people are regularly looking at just seems to make sense. Including tips to trim ear hair also wouldn’t hurt.
What to do about the hair? Well you could let nature take it’s course and give Radhakant Bajpaj a run for the record books, but there may be an awkward stage where ladies won’t be drawn to your appearance and the supportive friends you have might just be keeping you around as a circus act. Is this type of hair production considered a curse or blessing?
Best to just nip that hair growth in the bud. Best options to date are obviously a specialized ear hair shaver or trimmer, or finding someone willing to pluck each of those embarrassing hairs from your aural cavities. Ear hair trimmers can be purchased at your nearest big box store for under $20, and were designed to chew through the coarse greasy hairs of both nose and ear. Design of these trimmers is also manly enough to justify purchase without the awkwardness usually accompanying shopping for any personal type items and one of the best ear hair trimmers out there is the Mangroomer.
Trim that ear hair back and have people focus on that well crafted moustache.





