The color nature gave me (at age 20, in the French Alps)

How I look today, unplugged (early AM, no make up), 30+ years later
In Nicole Holofcener’s recent film, Please Give, a middle-aged woman acidly characterizes her grandmother’s hair color as being “stuck in a shade of menopausal red.” As a woman on the verge of menopause whose hair has been getting redder by the year, I would have felt stung by this line – except that by the time I heard it, I’d already decided to make 2011 the year I finally go gray.
That scathing assessment underlined one more reason to go through with my Hairy New Year’s resolution. Just the week before I heard it, I’d looked in the mirror and seen a faint but uncomfortable echo of my mother’s face when she was my age, with her hair dyed a harsh reddish-brown that didn’t flatter the pale Irish skin that I’ve inherited from her. When my sister came to visit at Thanksgiving, her reaction to my decision suggested she was seeing the same thing, as she immediately recalled how much more attractive Mom had looked once she ditched the Clairol.
Even my long-time colorist, who I’d dreaded breaking the news to, was warmly supportive, saying she thought that my real silver-gray color (which she and I glimpse each month before she covers it) would look “very pretty.” No small concession given she’s going to lose a significant monthly fee once she’s finished helping me through what I’m calling “my transition.”
No doubt some eavesdroppers will think that means I’m having a gender change, and frankly, it feels a bit like that. I worry that I will feel unsexed, unfeminine – OK, I admit it, just plain old -- once I’ve traded my falsely red-brown locks for a naturally silver-gray pelt. Part of the problem is that I have to make a leap of faith. I can hope that I’ll end up looking like Emmy Lou Harris, but the reality will in fact be far less stunning (especially since my resemblance to Emmy Lou was slight even when we were both young). Every time I’ve pondered making this change in the past decade, I’ve wished there were some magical device that could show what I’ll look like when the real me is revealed at last.
It’s strange not to know what you actually look like without cosmetic intervention. (Unlike make-up, you don’t take your hair color off at night.) I haven’t seen my real hair since it was a medium brown divided by a skunky streak of gray. Surveying the half-inch of roots that grows in each month, I’ve watched it slowly progress from that single streak to full-on salt and pepper to mostly silvery salt with pepper holding on for dear life in back. But I have no idea what I’ll look like with a full head of platinum.
And the answer to that question is still a ways off since, other than shaving your head, there is no quick and easy way to go gray. Even my fast-growing hair only manages six inches a year, and I don’t look good with a truly short cut, so I have about 18 months of slow transformation ahead. My colorist will start things off in a few weeks by shifting me from red-brown to a pseudo-salt and pepper look, with a dark brown base and slender blonde highlights. Then month-by-month, she’ll add and subtract with increasing restraint in order to let my natural color slowly take over. As skillful as she is, and as preferable as this approach is to the hideous two-tone method of growing gray out cold turkey, I know that at times this transformation will feel as awkward as going through puberty.
So why the heck am I putting myself through this, especially since my hair color fools people into thinking I’m several years younger than I really am?
That’s the question I’ve had from several women, who have visibly cringed at the idea of the coloring bottle being pulled away from anything other than their cold dead hands. But it’s precisely cold, dead hands that worry me. Yes, the research is mostly only suggestive that hair coloring products are bad for your health, but the fact is that they are full of nasty chemicals that I otherwise avoid putting into or onto my body. So how can I justify soaking my scalp with them every four weeks, year after year?
And those years do add up. I started going gray in my 20’s, and have been coloring my hair for a quarter of a century. I began with semi-permanent products, but eventually had to go hardcore because I have what colorists call “resistant gray hair” that fights being covered. (Perhaps I should have been listening to what my body was trying to tell me?) Going by one rule of thumb -- not to use permanent hair color for more than 10 years -- my crystal has already gone dark. Especially since dark is what I’ve been making myself – marinating my noggin in the shades that contain the most potentially harmful dyes.
And dying is what I don’t want to do any earlier than I have to, and so dyeing is what I’m going to give up. Still, despite the health concerns and the hassle and cost of monthly hair appointments, the decision to become what I can’t help but think of as a “grayhairedoldwoman” (as if it were all one thing) is not easy for someone whose tresses have always been her literal and not just her proverbial glory.
Age 16. I'm not sure what astounds me most about this picture -- how long my hair is, how thin I am, or the fact that I actually have a tan!
Growing up, I had a horse’s tail of thick glossy hair and wore it all the way down to my waist in high school and college before going nutty with perms, layered cuts, mousse, gel and other nonsense as a young career woman in the 1980’s. Eventually I accepted that string-straight is what my hair wants to be, and simple is the style that I’m capable of maintaining. For the past 15 years, my hair has fluctuated between the long waterfall of my adolescence and the chin-length bob of my childhood, with only minor variations.
In 1979, I chopped off my hair and got a perm, in the style of the times. The woman who cut off my hair nearly broke down and cried.

I was cross-addicted to mousse and hair spray in my late 20's (it took a load of product to get my hair to do this). People started calling me "Spike" (really).
When I was young, my hair got so much attention that I actually found it annoying. Even in the hair-glorious days of the 70’s when almost every girl – and many boys – had cascades flowing down their backs, mine was singled out for its length, thickness and gleaming brown beauty. Everyone wanted to touch it, and many people did so without asking, stroking me as if I were a cat with particularly silky fur. Even strangers who saw me in public felt they had the right to fondle it, making me wonder more than once if “hair molestation” was a crime.
By my mid-30's, I'd recovered from my dependency on hair products and was heading back to a long thick straight mane.

Going a little Veronica Lake in my late 30's.
As is the way of youth, I didn’t appreciate what I had, accepting the bounty that nature had awarded me as merely my due. When I began to go gray in my twenties, I had intimations of mortality, but coloring quickly covered up this uncomfortable reality, and I continued to take my still-luxurious locks for granted. It was only in my 40’s, when a hair stylist made a throwaway comment about the thinning at my temples, that I shook myself awake and realized that my crown wasn’t nearly as glorious as it once had been. While I’d been sleeping, age and hormones had been busy in the hidden places, reducing the follicular surplus I’d always taken for granted. I’d had hair to spare my entire life, but to my shock I realized that it had dwindled to just enough.
“Hormones,” stylists said when I asked them the cause, identifying as turncoat the previously sexy friend of my body. (An enemy that was about to wreak other havoc, as perimenopause set in.) It seemed incomprehensible that my once near-Olympian skill of growing scads of hair could have come to an end without my even being aware that my powers were fading.
And, horror of horrors, was it going to get worse? Was I going to end up one of those old women I’d always secretly pitied, desperately trying to coax thin strands into covering her scalp? For several years, I anxiously watched both my hairbrush and temples, but detected no further losses.
So, with my hirsute stores in a holding pattern, I’ve decided to end their chemical dependency before more damage might be done. Within a year and a half, I’ll be off the bottle – the coloring bottle, that is.
And if at some future date someone wants to stroke my lovely silver hair – well, I just might let’em.


Salon.com
Comments
Very Much Rated
( I think we all hope that we'll end up looking like Emmylou!)
But the word grey is depressing -- it ought to be banned in reference to hair.
I started coloring my hair when gray showed up 10 years ago, before I turned 40. I've been using a color that's close to my natural shade and works well with my skin color - doing it myself at home with good results. When the gray comes in, it's still patchy, not far enough along to look good if I let it go natural. I see at least a few more years of hair coloring in my future. When it's time for me to make the transition, I suspect that I'll need some professional help to keep it from looking scary.
Loved your pics! Particularly the V.Lake pic! Sassy!
fun article, by the way.
You will like your gray self I suspect. The face that looks back in the mirror is authentic. Women, and men too, seem to get a decade or so where coloring enhances and looks good, then at some point, the color begins to look too harsh for the face. I always thought Christo's wife Jeanne Claude looked fabulous in her cherry red hair, but her aim seemed to be an artistic statement.
I always thought of it as color or length. If I stayed gray, I could keep the extreme length, or if I went short, I could have outrageous color. I'm glad I went with long and gray, so of course, I think you're gong to look gorgeous!
You will feel like a goddess, trust me. It's so awesome. I love my hair. I grew it out in a big unorganized mess. I just didn't cut or dye for nearly a year. Everyone important to me in my life (husband, children, students) love it.
I have nothing against dyed hair. I don't even particularly think old women with dyed hair look bad. I think it's sort of festive, actually. But it wasn't for me, and this was the best beauty decision I ever made. My hair is silver and white, but my face is youthful. I look like a faerie tale creature. (I need to change my profile pic, don't I?) You are so gorgeous right now. With your real hair, you'll be surprised at how cool it is. You'll like it, I bet.
Great writing, too. Thank you!
Even though I'm nearly 51, I'm somehow not that gray. I'm using Just For Men rinse because I think it's very suspicious that men's rinses take 5 minutes but women's take hours! I'd like to think one day I'll embrace all of me, even the gray side of me, and give that up!
Henna is much more natural than regular dye. It doesn't smell or make my scalp sting. It's a pain to use.
I don't want to go gray. I know I'll look older. When my mother was still dying her hair and my father was gray (they both went gray young, giving me lousy genes) they took my grandmother out for mother's day. The waiter assumed the couple was the man and woman with white hair. I don't think he got much of a tip.
I never want to be mistaken for my husband's mother.
I'm of course still enough of a pissant teenager to refuse to dye my hair on account of not only is it a pain but that I love making my mother feel really old:).
Rated.
rated
So in 2010, I grew out my colored hair and in December 2010, I had it cut. Now I am "natural", with gray temples, gray neck and gray filaments throughout.
My daughter (15), says: "Cool! Mom, you're rocking the gray."
I am learning to love myself in silver.
Unlike my mother who dyed her hair a fake orange-red until she got cancer in her mid-sixties, I, at 48, am currently in the "transition"stage but am not doing it with a hairdresser. A friend of mine in Germany, where women don't usually go through all the nonsense with their hair as they do here in North America, has beautiful, soft white hair, which she keeps in a simple just above-the-shoulder style. She is 51 years old, tall and fit, and looks gorgeous. Unfortunately for me, I am short and becoming dumpy now that I have been in full menopause for over a year.
I was blond as a child, and then a kind of red/strawberry blond in my teens and twenties, until I started to get blond highlights. In my late twenties I was told that I had too much grey and would thus have to dye my hair if I wanted it blondish. I highlighted and then dyed my hair blond for years, but after only a few weeks it would have that false bleached blond look and make me look washed out. So, a few months ago, I decided enough was enough, and I started growing it out. My hair is very white in front, so in photos I look ghastly old. I'm thinking of going the formal, hairdresser-assisted transition route and doing the "low-lighting" thing, whatever that is. I, too, would love to look like Emmie Lou Harris when I'm done. Sigh...
Thanks for writing about this. I'm so glad to know there will be many of us going the natural route! I think it looks so much better than the look of our mothers' generation and that of women now in the sixties. ~R
Things went swimmingly until she happened to say " you know, if you died your temples you'd look a lot younger"!
As my patience with all youthful arrogance took its final breath I replied " Sweetie, I was born with the face, I earned my hair!"
I politely took her straight home, missed her parted lips 6 inches north and planting her goodnight kiss (which I assure you on my part was well on its way to becoming legendary) on her forehead, said good night, and never ever called her.
First, thanks SO much for being kind and supportive! It means a lot, especially when posting something this personal and exposing. And I'm flattered by the many kind things that have been said about my appearance in these photos. I actually hate pictures of myself, so it was nervewracking to post these and felt (as some of you surmised) very exposing to do so. So thank you for all the compliments!
Thanks, too, for all the encouragement to go gray! It was interesting that many of you who haven't even done so yet yourselves were telling me, "You go (gray), girl!" I also loved hearing from those who have gone gray (or never colored your hair at all) and are happy. I'm sure I'll need to re-read these comments when I get into this process! You will help keep my motivation up to make this big change.
I also loved hearing all your individual hairstories! Hair is such a huge part of our appearance, and we're all attached to ours (and hope it remains attached to us). A friend predicted I would get a lot of responses to this piece for that reason, and because almost all women struggle with the question of whether to color their hair at some point in their lives.
finally, I was pleased that I got some comments from men. While some men now color their hair, for them it is more a matter of dealing with hair loss -- an issue that's discussed a lot in relation to men's appearance. What's not much talked about that almost all women have hair loss as they age, too, which is why I decided to write about that, too. I think it's a shock for many women, as it was for me, that we might have to deal with hair loss, too -- as well as all the other signs of aging -- having grown up thinking that's only something men deal with.
Peace n' love,
Robert Dugan :)
Next I went through that awful phase women experience when they first admit to being gray--not giving my hair proper care, not using good products on it, sort of punishing it (and myself) for being this way. Then I realized that a lot of older women have hair that is no longer lustrous simply because they neglect it, as I did. I started treating my hair as though I loved it as much as I did when it was pretty much the color yours used to be. Now my hair is longer, it has body and shine and it is silver and gray with a few white streaks. And I love it. I have earned it, and I love it. My friends love it.
Be aware that the rest of the world won't be as enlightened. Many people will treat you like a person who is twenty years older than your real age. Clerks will stop calling you that dreaded name--ma'am--and start calling you an even worse one: Dear. People will try to help you with suitcases and groceries. Don't be daunted by this. Our culture will only outgrow our collective freakish fear of age when millions of us simply stop worrying about it.
Own it. Wear it proudly. Good for you!
Rated.
sparkling on green hills
she appears at dawn
sun gleaming on her hair.
I identify with so much of this, Nelle. Very interesting.
I think of the 1940's as a decade when both hair and clothing styles were attractive at the same time.