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Most men won’t call it skincare, but they’re doing it anyway. Around the world, the routine spreads, but never lands the same way. Life | Lifestyle The bathroom is quiet, early light cutting across the mirror. A man stands there a second longer than he used to. Not fixing his hair, not checking what to wear. Just looking. Skin a bit tired, slightly uneven, something that wasn’t there just a few months ago. The movement that follows is quick. Water, hands, a half-used cleanser next to a razor that’s been ignored longer than it should have been. No ritual, no performance. Just a small correction before the day begins. They won’t call it skincare. But they notice when it’s missing. Where the habit came fromFor a long time, this moment didn’t exist. Skincare sat outside the male routine. Easy to ignore, easier to postpone. Part of what changed traces back to South Korea, where taking care of your skin was never treated as an extra step. It was built in. Structured, consistent, almost automatic. That approach travelled. Not as a full system, but as an idea. When it landed elsewhere, it was cut down to size. Fewer steps, less time, no interest in getting it perfect. What remained was simple: do something and keep doing it. Men didn’t adopt the routine. They adapted it. The routine meets realityOn paper, the routine looks the same everywhere. Across most men, the basics rarely change. Cleanse, maybe hydrate, step out the door. In reality, it rarely survives unchanged. Cold air tightens the skin, pulls moisture out fast. A heavier cream that felt unnecessary last month suddenly becomes the only thing that works. Heat flips it completely. Skin reacts quicker, products sit heavier, routines collapse into something lighter, faster. Sometimes just a quick wash before stepping back outside. What worked somewhere else starts to feel like too much within minutes. No one announces these changes. Men adjust without thinking, use less, switch something out, rinse again and move on. Some routines stretch slightly longer. Others are done in under a minute, between stepping out and moving on. The routine travels. The skin doesn’t. What actually sticksWhat’s left is rarely complicated. Most men’s skincare routines settle into two or three steps. Anything more doesn’t survive the week. A cleanser that does its job. Something to keep the skin from drying out. Protection when it becomes necessary. That’s enough. Men don’t build routines. They keep what doesn’t annoy them and drop anything that takes too long. If a product earns its place, it stays. If it doesn’t, it’s gone without a second thought. The basics most men end up using • A cleanser to clean their skin properly, not just water • A light moisturiser to stop their skin from drying out • Sunscreen when spending time in the sun The new standardNo one talks about it directly, but it shows. Skin looks clearer, more even, less neglected. Not polished, not overdone. Just handled. It doesn’t change how a man presents himself dramatically. It raises the baseline, just enough that neglect stands out immediately. Most routines don’t fail. They just don’t survive the environment. Back to the mirrorBy the time the mirror clears, the moment is already over. The routine takes a few minutes, barely interrupting the day, but it leaves a trace. A habit that moved across cultures, reshaped at every stop and settled into something quieter than expected. Men may not talk about it. But they’ve stopped ignoring it completely. Hanan: text • 29 March 2026 Articles like this? Lifestyle You Might Like This Loved this one? Hanan picked a few more you might like. Your voice!
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