Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Going Gray and living authentically

  I'm halfway through Going Gray: What I learned about beauty, sex, work, motherhood, authenticity and  everything else that really matters  by  Anne Kreamer.
Which is appropriate, since I'll be turning 40 in less than a week.
It should be easy.  My grandmother did it early in her life and was rewarded with beautiful, thick white waves.  I also attend a Quaker meeting where most of the women do not artificially cover their gray.  And my best friend and husband Richard has taken the lead. I think he looks fantastic.

I agree with Kreamer when she discusses the benefits of presenting ourselves as we really are.  American women have bought into a marketing trick by the beauty industry.  Hair color doesn't really make us look younger.  We aren't fooling anyone.  In our attempt to maintain artificial youth we are deceiving ourselves.  I have decided that I want to feel young inside more than I want to look young.  I have no desire to stop what is inevitable.  Actor Steve Martin did it early and as a result, no one notices that he's aged in the last 20 years.

I also have the advantage of being blessedly anonymous, with the good fortune to work from home.  Would I be brave enough to do this if I were still working in a public setting like the library or the college?   I'm not sure.

However, the blog is somewhat public.   I've begun to notice that my picture on the sidebar, taken one year ago, looks like a younger version of Jenny.   Blogging, like going gray, is supposed to be an act of authenticity.  I consider this space more important than other social media sites for this very reason.  We can be transparent here.  In fact, authenticity is a quality highly desired by most readers.  In that spirit, I've decided to share the pictures of my hair as it changes.  As I age. 

6 comments:

  1. I think you are very brave, but I'm sure you will still look beautiful. I think that's a lovely idea that you are going to share the pictures with us. My husband starting to go grey in his early 30's, but I thought it really suited him. I think there is SO much pressure on women these days to look younger, always look good, exercise, diet, etc. etc. Thankfully, it never used to be like that when I was younger, so I missed most of the pressure! Good luck!

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  2. I have gray in the same area. Friends assure me that I will color my hair the grayer I get, but I seriously doubt it for two reasons (and, no, they aren't as noble as yours) 1) I'm cheap and cannot see spending the money over and over again to cover my gray 2) I would always have some gray showing anyway because I'm not into getting my hair "done" very often and would go so long between treatments that people would know I was gray anyway!
    So I vote for authenticity!
    Keep up the God work.

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  3. Happy early Birthday... Yay for Gray!! I always figured I have earned every single one of these and should be proud of them and I am! I am 41 and sort of in a bit of an awkward stage of going gray... just in patches... but.. I name them after my kids and figure by the time I get all 5 kids named it will be pretty filled in :)

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  4. You are gorgeous :)
    My mother used to die her hair (she went gray early...) and now she's back to natural, and so much happier. And it just looks so much better, healthier.

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  5. Happy soon to be 40th birthday! YAY! :)

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