Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isnt it pretty rare for someone to be fully grey until the are fairly elderly? I know there are exceptions, but my 90 year old grandmother is only about 50 percent grey, and my late 60’s mother probably less than a quarter. I’m 40 and only see a very few grey hairs, but am a natural blonde so it probably blends in.
I was wondering the same thing too. I'm 42 and brunette and I've only seen a few grays. My mom is 73 and about 1/3 gray, the rest is light brown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isnt it pretty rare for someone to be fully grey until the are fairly elderly? I know there are exceptions, but my 90 year old grandmother is only about 50 percent grey, and my late 60’s mother probably less than a quarter. I’m 40 and only see a very few grey hairs, but am a natural blonde so it probably blends in.
I was wondering the same thing too. I'm 42 and brunette and I've only seen a few grays. My mom is 73 and about 1/3 gray, the rest is light brown.
I’m 42 and probably 70-80% gray. People who judge women with gray hair tend to be women who don’t have to color their hair! It’s easy to see gray hair as a moral failing of some sort or an easily corrected cosmetic flaw when you’re not experiencing it yourself.
It’s genetic and I agree that it is pretty rare and I’m pretty young for this. I’ve been going gray gradually since 20 or so and new growth became more gray than not when I was 37 or 38. I’ve received all sorts of nasty comments about it, the worst from a female boss just a bit older than me when I was in my early 30s. Men don’t seem to care. Most women I know have a few grays that are easily masked with high or lowlights, but my situation as a reddish brunette going gray young seems to befuddle hair colorists. After years of them trying to take me blond, making me a very dark brown with horribly obvious roots in 2 weeks, or trying to maintain my former color but turning orange despite every possible toner and fancy shampoo, I gave up. I was paying a lot and wasting a ton of money to look “acceptable” but the results were never objectively attractive past week 1.
My gray ages me but so did my attempts to correct it, and I have moved on. My coloring and my current hair color are very similar to Sarah Harris so I find her look helpful for choosing clothing and makeup. (Sadly, my bone structure does not resemble hers!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isnt it pretty rare for someone to be fully grey until the are fairly elderly? I know there are exceptions, but my 90 year old grandmother is only about 50 percent grey, and my late 60’s mother probably less than a quarter. I’m 40 and only see a very few grey hairs, but am a natural blonde so it probably blends in.
I was wondering the same thing too. I'm 42 and brunette and I've only seen a few grays. My mom is 73 and about 1/3 gray, the rest is light brown.
Anonymous wrote:Isnt it pretty rare for someone to be fully grey until the are fairly elderly? I know there are exceptions, but my 90 year old grandmother is only about 50 percent grey, and my late 60’s mother probably less than a quarter. I’m 40 and only see a very few grey hairs, but am a natural blonde so it probably blends in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have gray hair at any age, you are sending two signals:
1. "I've given up"
2. "I'm not interested in being attractive to my husband"
Do your statements have any parameters? What if the woman is 70, 80 or older? What if she has a medical condition that precludes coloring?
Anonymous wrote:I’m fully grey at 50, since the pandemic. I don’t think I’ll keep it long-term but I’m enjoying the respite from chemicals in my hair every 2 weeks. My DH loves it and encouraging me to keep it - and he is being sincere. He’s always marched to the best of his own drum, though.
It’s interesting to read what people might be projecting or perceiving when they see my gray hair. And none of it is really about me. By no means have I “given up” and I certainly DO care what my DH thinks.