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Can’t ignore grey hair any longer

39 replies

user1480880826 · 28/02/2020 07:13

I’ve had a few grey hairs for a about 4 years now but they’re finally starting to grow in noticeable places like in my parting. I don’t think I can ignore them any longer.

I have mid brown hair and the thought of having to spend loads of money dying it every few weeks fills me with dread. I suppose I can afford it but it seems like a chore and there are things I would rather spend my money on.

What are my options? I don’t know the first thing about covering grey hair.

OP posts:
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Ninkanink · 28/02/2020 18:43

@user1480880826 you can take up dyeing anytime but undoing it can become quite problematic. So no harm in waiting a little longer to see how you feel.

But I feel like I should state now that there’s no obligation not to dye your hair in order to be doing womanhood right, either!

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Dozer · 28/02/2020 18:49

The primary issues for me are cost, time and health (skin reactions and hardcore chemicals in the dye).

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MrsEricBana · 28/02/2020 19:04

The bottom line is you can't win if you choose to colour or not so, as with anything, you just need to do what's right for you. Probably doesn't need to be a huge feminist debate.

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Fatted · 28/02/2020 19:18

Personally, I'd say give it a go at growing them out and see how you feel. You can always dye it again if you hate it!!

I'm 39 and have just gone six months without dying my hair. I eventually gave up and started colouring it again. I hated how it looked, with my colour in the ends fading. The hair on the top of my head is still growing in mainly dark, but the underneath is mostly grey. I think I'm going to wait now until it is all growing in grey before I give up colouring it.

I just colour mine at home every month. My favourite is a Loreal one which comes with a tube of what I'd describe as a toner or colour wash. You can use that to top up the colour every couple of weeks. I only then actually need to dye my hair every six weeks.

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Titsywoo · 28/02/2020 19:18

I'm the least vain person ever and rarely wear makeup, am generally a bit of a scruff but I dye my hair. It's nothing to do with looking older - I'm not trying to cover my wrinkles - but I like my hair to be a colour I like and grey isn't it for me. Lots of people embrace the grey and good on them - although shades and tones of grey are very different so it's down to what you get really!

I've been highlighting my hair all my life but when the grey really started coming through I made all the highlights bleach. People did compliment it but actually i don't think it worked that well for me (and certainly not my hair condition!). This month I had one bleach, one darker golden blonde and one sort of reddy-auburn colour which looks great.

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Ninkanink · 28/02/2020 20:00

It’s all good! I agree you can’t win as a woman no matter what you do or don’t do, and I’m not judging any woman for any decision she makes about her own body. I really wasn’t intending to turn it into a great big feminist discussion but I do have a very rebellious streak when it comes to societal expectations of women so I usually can’t help railing against it. OP’s obvious hesitancy to start on the treadmill came through so I responded to that.

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fairlygoodmother · 28/02/2020 20:11

I have a single process on my hair and have for years, before it even went grey really. As others have said, this is really hard to come back from because you have a hard stripe as it grows out. It looks great for about 2 weeks but terrible after 5.

So if you want to do anything I would recommend start with minimal intervention - some bits of highlight colour to add interest or a sharper cut - and see how you go, build up if you feel you want to. There are lots of people who look wonderful with their natural grey hair. Maybe you’ll be one of them. My clothes style tends towards frumpy and scruffy so I’m not ready to let my hair go yet.

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GreyHairDontCare111 · 28/02/2020 20:23

I’m in my mid 30s and have grown out my greys, after years of dyeing it. I just had enough one day and stopped. I’m very salt and pepper as you can see (pic attached). I’m much happier, my hair is in better condition than ever and I don’t think it makes me look any older. Being a tired, stressed, working mum is what makes me look old, nothing to do with my hair Grin

Can’t ignore grey hair any longer
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inwood · 28/02/2020 20:56

@GreyHairDontCare111 mine is just like yours!

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TheHumansAreDefinitelyDead · 28/02/2020 22:37

Ah OP, I have exactly the same conundrum...

My greys are suddenly appearing, in my mid brown hair. Not a lot, but just enough to notice whenever I look in the mirror.

I am thinking about dying it, but am not into the whole faff and commitment around that. It is not that I am not vain, but am not big on make up, nails or even hair. Saying that, I am vain enough to be pleased when a friend told me my hair always looks glossy and in good condition... (preen). My style is kind of sporty and natural, not “done”.

To dye or not to dye? I am as yet undecided. DH has started a few grey hairs as well and he is all romantic about going grey together....

Still undecided. Sorry if that is not helpful. Deep down I cannot be arsed and I hope I’ll be like my my who at age 82 is only 20% grey (but everyone thinks she dyes her hair anyway, at her age Grin)

Let’s keep our fingers crossed for lucky genes, and decide next month/year/decade Grin

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TheHumansAreDefinitelyDead · 28/02/2020 22:38

Am late 40s fwiw

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Astrabees · 03/03/2020 10:17

Youthfulness is prized for one reason only - sexual availability - and associated attitudes of patriarchy/misogyny are hugely oppressive and damaging to girls and women. I’m not going to mindlessly play along with that. I don't think I can agree with this rather extreme position. Youthfulness is prized and admired because the young tend to be fit, adventurous, have lovely lives because they are not dragged down by being parents and employees in jobs they don't love. My young adult children are passionate about causes, fashion, creativity and yes, i would like to recapture some of those qualities myself (which I hope to in retirement) The lovely hair is a bit of an identifier but a signal of sexual availability ? I don't think so. The young are the future of the human race, I think that's why we admire them.

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Ninkanink · 03/03/2020 12:12

Ok I should have made it more clear. Youthfulness in women is prized for only one reason. Otherwise there would be absolutely no shame in ageing, in looking older (or even, god forbid one’s actual age!), or in letting one’s body take it’s natural course. There’d be no pressure to change one’s hair colour once the grey starts coming through, unless one wanted to for fun, nor no implied obligation to present an appearance that is closer to the perceived ideal.

Of course that’s an extreme position. Of course there are nuances to everything.

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fresh · 03/03/2020 12:23

Agree about the pressure to not look old, I'm fighting the pressure but still giving in a bit - recently divorced so the new brave version of me isn't quite settled yet!

However, I too am allergic to hair dye. Have discovered Superdrug wash in colour conditioner which is pretty good - no ppd, and I use it once a week. Too much use can make the greys go very orange, so it's trial and error. It fades gradually, so no badger stripes.

It's my compromise until I'm comfortable with the grey - if I could go white straight away I would!

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