I remember when I first started shaving.
Didn't really know how to shave, didn't have anyone to ask. I remember going to the market and buying a razor and shaving cream -- and, oddly, being embarrassed about it. I think it was the knowing smiles on the other shoppers and the cashier.
Young guy with a few little hairs sticking out of his face, buying that stuff. Sheesh!
It was pretty simple, learning how to do it. I'd seen it done. You lather up your face, you shave with the grain. Then you shave any place you still feel stubble against the grain. You wash up. After that, I learned to make sure the blade was sharp before starting, dull blades are pretty bad.
Eventually, I learned how to keep from nicking myself too often. It seemed counter-intuitive that a sharper blade reduced the chance of nicks.
Nowadays, there are a lot more choices on shaving. Do you use soap or gel? What kind of razor - three blades? Four blades? Five blades?
Of course there's the old safety razor and the electric razor. And, years ago, a friend of mine always used a straight razor! Decisions, decisions, decisions.
As an aside: I saw an ad for the new five bladed razor (four plus one). In the ad it was implied that, if you felt a bit of stubble at the end of the day, you should switch to their razor. Excuse me? Unless the razor has the ability to halt hair growth, it's not going to handle that problem! How stupid does this company think we are?
Which method works best is something you need to work out for yourself. Some of the new shaving cream/gels have pain suppressors and blood coagulants, so you don't know you're nicking yourself. Hmmm. Don't think that's a good idea, personally.
The multiple bladed disposables seem a bit gimmicky. I can see a bit of a reason for two, but five?
But, here is more to think about. When you use shaving cream from a can and disposable razors, you are just adding more to what you send to the landfill. To me, it's the wrong attitude. It's the wrong thing to do.
I've seen some recommendations that, to reduce what you throw away, use a shaving mug and a safety razor. This will greatly reduce what you throw away, and you can get a perfectly smooth shave.
But here is yet another viewpoint.
Years ago, I was religiously shaving with a blade. At that time I was using disposable twin-blade razors and some kind of gel. I got a great shave and it was really close, at 7:00 am. But I didn't actually come in contact with other people until I got to work at 9:00 am. By then there was no difference between my blade shave and someone else's electric shave. No noticeable difference!
So, I asked myself, who was I trying to impress between 7:00 am and 9:00 am?
I went out and bought a good electric razor. With an electric shaver, I use less water -- usually none, no shaving cream, no throwing razors out every few days, no mess.
I bought a top quality shaver, so I get a close shave with no irritation. I can shave while running out the door. I can shave in the car. I can do a real quick shave in the evening. Seems to me to be a great deal all around. Less stuff going to the landfill and a faster, easier and perfectly adequate shave.