Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Usually the lighter your hair complexion/color, the earlier you start.
Usually.
Some very light blonde people start going gray in their mid 20s are completely gray/white by their 40s.
Some dark haired people don't start until their late 50s and don't go gray until their late 60s or 70s.
Interesting. My blonde family is definitely exception to that then. 78 year old mom, 48 year old sister and 45 year old me, none of us have even spotted one yet.
My grandma was a tow head, but still blonde as an adult (dirty blonde, but never brown) and she is still gray free at 92. It's wild. My cousins and I used to look for her grays and we were convinced she dyed her hair, but she never has. During covid when all her friends couldn't get their hair dyed, they were shocked she still had no grays. Her son has dark brown hair and didn't get any gray until mid 60s.
I don't think hair color and complexion have anything to do with it. I grew up with lots of Asian friends and so many of them already had grays in high school. Maybe because we can see it easier in their dark hair?