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Sex and Relationships

Women Who Go Gray and Stay Sexy

By Anne Kreamer, American Sexuality Magazine. Posted January 29, 2008.


Women who keep their hair gray often find themselves more in demand than the women who use hair dyes.
goinggraycover220
Going gray
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Last month at a lunch in a restaurant on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, I had an unusual experience. I, and the three other women with whom I was eating, became the focus of attention from strangers. As we were ushered to our table, every head in the place turned. There was nothing particularly unique about us -- we ranged in age from thirty-eight to fifty-three and all of us were wearing versions of the standard New York City uniform, dark and understated. But we all did share one highly unusual trait -- each of us had gray hair. And four gray-haired women under the age of sixty together in New York City is a remarkable sight. Something far more rare and interesting, as it turned out, than the fact that two stars of a hit TV show -- Melina Kanakaredes and Anna Belknap of CSI New York -- were eating at the table directly opposite ours. Those gorgeous celebrities were rendered invisible in the crowded restaurant by our table of gray-haired nobodies.

In 2007 when I was fifty-one, I published Going Gray, a memoir-cum-amateur-social-science exploration of what it felt like to be gray-haired in America. I wrote honestly about my own fears and experiences as I abandoned hair dye after twenty-four years of coloring, and I became my own guinea pig in various experiments where I probed two of women's biggest fears about aging: that they will be limited professionally by looking "old" and that they will lose their sexual attractiveness if they have gray hair. My experiments produced stunningly counterintuitive results.

In one, I posted my profile and picture on Match.com, putatively looking for dates in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles -- first with my hair photoshopped back to the brown color I had once dyed it, and then, months later, with my current gray hair. To my surprise, three times as many men in each of those cities expressed interest in going out with me with my hair gray than they had with my dyed hair. Good Morning America's producers, somewhat incredulous of my results, replicated the stunt in advance of my appearance on the program, with a sixty-one-year-old widow from Florida, and had exactly the same results. Needless to say, the finding that men seem actually to prefer a woman with gray hair (among many other surprising findings in my book) generated a tremendous amount of media interest.

The unanticipated and serendipitous connections that were generated through the press coverage ultimately led to my lunch date last month. One of the women, *Audrey, had been featured on a local news segment in New York that presented gray as the new "hot" color for hair. After the segment she wrote to me and we struck up a conversation. *Jane had been inspired by my book to launch a website, Graygirls.com, that celebrates gray hair. We, too, had become Internet friends. And the third woman at the luncheon, *Aki, was my close friend who had initially inspired me to stop dyeing my hair. I had the notion that it might be fun for all of us to meet and share our stories. But I certainly had no premeditated sense that four gray-haired women eating lunch together in Manhattan would register as some kind of freakish phenomenon.

On reflection, the hubbub we created makes a bit of sense. In 1950 only 7% of American women artificially colored their hair while today Clairol estimates that at least 65% of women in America dye. That's pretty much at the saturation level, and a survey that I conducted for a piece I wrote for Time suggested that the overwhelming majority pretty much obtains whether a woman lives in a small community in New England or urban areas like St. Louis or Dallas, based on the gray-hair versus color-hair divide. If a gray-haired young-middle-aged woman is now something of a rarity in our culture, then seeing four gray-haired young-middle-aged women together was the equivalent of seeing a group of Amish women in New York City.


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See more stories tagged with: women, aging, grey hair, dye

Anne Kreamer is the former executive vice president and worldwide creative director of Nickelodeon / Nick at Nite and part of the founding team of Spy magazine. She graduated from Harvard College and lives in Brooklyn with her husband, the writer Kurt Andersen, and their two daughters.

 

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Absolutely right
Posted by: Elmcorners on Jan 29, 2008 12:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My wife's hair was turning gray when I met her and now is a brilliant white. I never want her to change it. Previously it had been reddish. That would have been okay, but white is hot.

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» White is hot? NOT Posted by: harpy
» RE: White is hot? NOT Posted by: YogiBear
YAWN
Posted by: ankhet on Jan 29, 2008 12:35 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A little ego trip on your part, perhaps, Missie? Well, a. bully for you! and b. talk about something that matters. Gray-haired and sexy, hoooo! There's an accomplishment that'll change the world. Do you hear men talking about this kind of crap? No, they're busy running the world. Is Alternet being invaded by Cosmo now? Sheesh!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: YAWN Posted by: Ruby
» RE: YAWN Posted by: ankhet
» Hear, hear! Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Hear, hear! Posted by: Wacre
» RE: YAWN Posted by: PJT
» RE: YAWN Posted by: migunz
» RE: YAWN Posted by: NoKidding
» RE: YAWN Posted by: ankhet
» are people really this dense? Posted by: thistleblower
» RE: are people really this dense? Posted by: fringedweller
No Way....
Posted by: Turiye on Jan 29, 2008 1:26 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I started going grey when I was 21, am 53 now. I have yet to meet a single woman who has let their hair go grey look better than when it has it's true or what we want to be true color.
Have to dash, busy helping the post above whose men are running the world!
Seriously, WTF, might Alternet speak to the State of Disunion Speech last night and the load of crap Senator from Kansas 'Democrats Response', bi-partisan effort requesting mr. president, my tush, join them? "It's time to get to work, she claims." So WTF have you been doing in the House(yes, i am aware she is a senator, but i am talking about the House, now)for the past year? As if I already was not aware, Kucinich exempt, behaving like spineless whimpering simps!

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» RE: No Way.... Posted by: mandiwrite
» RE: No Way.... Posted by: odanu
» RE: No Way.... Posted by: coldestcaress
» RE: No Way.... Posted by: LeeAnnG
Grey
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jan 29, 2008 4:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes a touch of grey is a nice highlight. Some women who age gracefully and honestly seem to have a charisma that transcends our obsession with youth.

Good article. I like these light, sociological ones. They help break up the madness.

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» RE: Grey Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Grey CALM Posted by: MyLeftFoot
an excellent counterpoint
Posted by: aislinnluv on Jan 29, 2008 4:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to the article a while back about women who choose to get cosmetic surgery to "enhance" their genitalia. a return to sanity - finally - and pooh on you who elect to categorize this as trivial. matters of self-esteem are not trivial; in fact, i bet many an act of aggression has been launched to rectify someone's feelings of inadequacy. to see evidence that what was once considered a mark of wisdom is once again being valued - priceless.

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» RE: an excellent counterpoint Posted by: ConnecttheDots
Hooray for Real Women!
Posted by: PJT on Jan 29, 2008 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a good article and we need to see more like it. As a 59 year old man there is nothing that pleases me more than a trim, fit, naturally and lovingly aged 59 year old woman being her sexy self instead of trying to act like a woman of 39, or 29. I'm married so I'm not chasing after them but I like to be with ladies like this, to admire them and show them in small ways I appreciate them. They like the attention too. There is a still-exclusive club out there: the 60-ish and older Real Women who know who they are, and their male contemporaries who are falling in love with them every day. You don't need hair dye, operations and Botox ladies: an hour of exercise a day and a healthy, natural diet is all it takes. Your skin will glow, your eyes will shine with self-knowledge, and if it's men you want, you can take your pick. PJTramdack

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» RE: Hooray for Real Women! Posted by: sal paradise
» RE: Hooray for Real Women! Posted by: Beepath
Wait a second!
Posted by: Philor on Jan 29, 2008 4:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anne is a beautiful woman.
If you're beautiful, going gray doesn't really matter. Who wouldn't date Julie Christie or Angelina Jolie with gray hair?
For the average looking woman who has to take a lot of assault everyday, you know, Am I too fat, am I in shape etc....going gray is another insult, another thing to watch. Now, sure, if you look like a model, you can go gray, you probably can go bold!

By the way, I'm not a woman, I'm a 45 year old man

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FACT: Gray hair adds 20+ years to most women, up to a point.
Posted by: jimidee on Jan 29, 2008 5:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That point is when their faces and bodies age so much that they start looking a bit freaky with dyed hair. We have all seen them...old ladys with jet black hair and hunched backs. It looks pathetic and one has to feel sorry for them.

But there truly is a fountain of youth and it is as close as your local fitness center (you have to go and do it and not just belong)...because you are WORTH it! If a woman keeps herself fit and trim, it does a lot more to keep her young than hair and make-up anyday...a fact that Clairol does not want you to think about.

Another fact is that biological years are much more important to the age you look than chronological years, especially after age 25. So eat well and stay fit, and then if you dye your hair it will match your body and you will truly look younger.

I also don't see what all of the fuss was about with 4 old gray headed ladies sitting at a table together...even in NYC. We have "blue hairs" here in KY that go out to eat all the time and nobody makes much of a fuss. I guess it kinda looked freaky in the big city, but is that really the kind of attention that women want?

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My dark haired 66yo mother....
Posted by: Smiggsy on Jan 29, 2008 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My mother is 66 & you can actually count the number of grey hairs on her head & its not many. Generally her hair is still very thick & a very dark brown (also her family origins are anglo-saxon). You would only realize her age from the laugh-lines on her neck & face.

Here's the facts:
1. Says she has only colored her hair TWICE in her whole life (in her 20's apparently) & NEVER treated (eg-permed)
2. She has ALWAYS worn a hat outside in the sun

Her hair will eventually go grey as you would expect (I hope I have her hair genes as my old man is all grey) Look after & care your hair like the rest of your body & it will always look great. Ladies.....constant abuse by salon treatments will make your hair go grey AND bald earlier than it should.

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» RE: Here are the facts: Posted by: jimidee
» RE: More of the facts: Posted by: Smiggsy
» RE: More of the facts: cont. Posted by: jimidee
Hear Hear!
Posted by: dustinblythe on Jan 29, 2008 5:31 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, let me get something off of my chest. The fad, at least where I live, over the past few years has been for women with dark, beautiful brown and even black hair to lighten their locks- first with highlights until it was nearly blonde and now with streaks of pink and purple. I do not know just when it became a "sin" for women to have dark hair or who decided that it was every woman's ideal to have blonde hair (I thought we left that behind with Hitler).

That being said, I do think it is attractive when a woman is mature and confident in her appearance. A gray or silver mane is striking and beautiful. Women like Emmylou Harris or characters like Meryl Streep in "Devil Wears Prada" are prime examples. Locally one of my city councilwomen is a fiftysomething with pure white hair and quite attractive.

If you have beautiful dark hair, love it. If your hair is turning a wonderful shade of gray or silver, flaunt it. One man's opinion.

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» RE: Green hair and ham... Posted by: jimidee
Signs of Intelligence Found on Upper West Side!
Posted by: hagwind on Jan 29, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think I've finally figured out how AlterNet can avoid shallow articles about sex, gender, and related subjects: Don't buy stories from writers who spend too much time in certain parts of New York or Los Angeles. My warning bells started ringing as soon as "restaurant on the Upper West Side" was mentioned. I kept reading because I hate to think of myself as a creature whose knee jerks for stereotypes, but by the bottom of the first page I knew that this time the warning bells were right so I stopped there.

Where I live, if you go out to eat with friends and spend that much time noticing whether people are noticing you, it's usually because the food and/or the company is boring.

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Faux-menism
Posted by: JMTulip on Jan 29, 2008 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This faux feminism, obsessed with the physical, that's been getting a lot of attention on AlterNet is more than a little tedious, and more than a little disturbing.

I want to hear from radical female voices on issues that matter to them, and the world as a whole. Not from self absorbed liberal, bourgeoisie hacks waxing poetic on the implications of wearing make up and going gray.

I realize that in the capitalist West, going old is now a traumatic and radical act, but give us a break.

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interesting viewpoint
Posted by: off-the-radar 2 on Jan 29, 2008 7:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nice to see a range of articles in Alternet and this one made me think about my decision to colour, colour, colour.

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Too hot?
Posted by: BST on Jan 29, 2008 7:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It could be, maybe? perhaps? that gray signifies mothering and casseroles to some (no, not all) men; more vibrant color signals a lively interest in sex, threatening to some (no, not all) men of a certain age and highly engaging for other men of the same age.

Since we're throwing around hypotheses, why not throw this on the table, too?

Sexiness and attractiveness, truly, is not about hair color for either sex. It's carriage and strut, kindness and flirtation, daring, zest and feistiness, good health, self-love and a whole lot of other things that don't sprout from the scalp.

But I'm still not interested in going gray, even if I get sidelined at a Manhattan restaurant when the quartet walks in.

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» RE: Too hot? Posted by: weequash
» RE: Too hot? Posted by: MelStL
American What?? Magazine
Posted by: Declan on Jan 29, 2008 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hurry up and post one about multiple orgasms please, or perhaps Brazilian waxing. Oooo I can't wait. I'm giddy with anticipation.

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Aging gracefully
Posted by: pinget on Jan 29, 2008 8:31 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Have Americans forgotten the notion of aging gracefully? Most people start getting gray hair at 30. Why is that not accepted since it is completely natural? Just a reminder, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg is 51 years old. Any color in her hair is fake. Nancy Pelosi is 68. My mother is 61 and still coloring her hair jet black - classy. Accept the gray ladies! You look ridiculous!

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» Early gray Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: Aging gracefully Posted by: Cooltruth
I am one of those guys
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Jan 29, 2008 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
who the fems and men's mags think doesn't exist.
I'm in my 60's(I've never been this old before).

Intelligrence is sexy.
Self confidence is sexy.
I am absolutely NOT into babysitting some young and immature female.
I don't NEED one of those to hang on my egotistical trophy holding arm.

I prefer smaller, pert breasts to those patella slammers.

For me, a self confident, intelligent mature woman(age AND emotionally) is very attractive.

I also have no interest in those women who cannot get past the media generated attitude of what a guy is, thinks of, etc.

I am NOT Mr Right.
I am Mr Real.

And another thing!!
If you try to make it happen, it never works.

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» RE: I am one of those guys Posted by: fringedweller
Dyeing can kill you!
Posted by: TarryFaster on Jan 29, 2008 9:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Among millions of others, dyeing her hair did Jackie Kennedy in, as well. The dyes are deadly! Click here for a report.

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» RE: Dyeing can kill you! Almost... Posted by: coldestcaress
» RE: Dyeing can kill you! Posted by: coldestcaress
Animal welfare lobbyist
Posted by: jmooney on Jan 29, 2008 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I recall being a young congressional aide in the 1980s, about 22 years old, and I used to deal with a 35ish woman who lobbied for animal welfare issues. When I first met her, she had great salt and pepper hair, but one day she appeared with her hair a color of brown. It was a well done dye job and all that, but I just thought her hair looked so great salt and pepper. It just seemed more professional, but, also, to me, sexier. Not that I should have been thinking about that (although as a straight male, I sometimes give way to lesser angels of my nature). I told her I liked her dye jobb, but she asked me which I preferred,a and I told her I liked her better going gray.

Funny, looking back now, I now recall that shew as the first person who told me that the space shuttle with the teacher on board had gone down. I was meeting her for lunch in a Capitol Hill restaurant and it was very cold, and I walked in, the place was buzzing, and she told me of the shuttle. Hummm...Oh, well, enough personal reminiscing on Alternet. Don't want one of my progressive brethren to criticize me for going off the political trail here. Good article, though.

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To each his/her own
Posted by: willymack on Jan 29, 2008 10:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember years back when I lived in Las Vegas and drove a bus for Greyhound and happened to be across the street from the terminal at Main and Fremont streets (for those of you familiar with Las Vegas). A local television newscaster by the name of Sue Tripathi was interviewing Steven King at the set of part of the movie "The Stand". I'd seen Sue many times on TV, heavily made up and thought she had an UNNATURAL look about her. Well, here she was with NO makeup or lipstick on. I couldn't believe how BEAUTIFUL she was; it was like seeing another person. Upon seeing my approach, she flashed me a brilliant smile and caused a response in me more appropriate to a teenager. We chatted for a few minutes, and I didn't know or care if Mr. King was there or not. My point here is that I don't consider makeup on a woman as necessary or even desirable. Same with high heeled shoes. If a woman is pretty, it matters not one bit if her hair turns GREEN; she't still pretty.

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Dye Jobs & Lie Jobs
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 29, 2008 10:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is something about a woman confident in her own skin regardless of her age. Covering up who you are under a truckload of makeup and hair dye is not going to reflect confidence to anyone.

The makeup/'beauty' industry trades in the same thing that the G.O.P. does- fear. Fear that you aren't pretty/handsome enough or look old or are not thin enough or that your teeth are not white enough. Whatever.

The amazing thing is not that the author discovered it, but that it took so long for a well educated person to figure this out.

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gabrielle
Posted by: chloe08 on Jan 29, 2008 10:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I realize that in the capitalist West, going old is now a traumatic and radical act, but give us a break

I am a 55 year old woman who started graying at the age16. I never thought much about it. My parents were gray in their early 20’s. On my way to work on the bus, I was often approached by people of both genders asking me how I achieved this effect? I usually responded by saying something like “natural causes”. Recently, on a lark, I got my first foil and loved it. I feel happy either way. I don’t need the approval of men, other women or the fashion industry to tell me that I am all right. I have never allowed myself to be held hostage by external standards of beauty or fears of aging. We are so concerned in the West about externals, yet we are dying inside because we have turned our backs to what is truly essential – compassion, dignity, vision. Fads…..

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» RE: gabrielle Posted by: fringedweller
Alternet's Faux Feminism Strikes Again
Posted by: Kym525 on Jan 29, 2008 11:19 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it rather telling that an article discusing the importance of the black female vote in South Carolina generated FEW responses while this one about white upper class women generated far more. Once again alternet feminists prove that issues pertaining to women of colour simply don't matter, or that it's a one-size (theirs) fits all mentality. So much for sisterhood being universal.

Black women (and women of colour in general) have never been ashamed of going grey or getting older. Perhaps it's because we look better than most white women do at the same age, or perhaps we're just happy to see another year in a society that continues to look down on us. Don't believe it? Check out last month's issue of Essence Magazine. Every year they highlight beautiful black women in their 40's and older and all of them put any white female celeb to shame. What's even more amazing is that these women are active in their communities and elsewhere, trying to make a difference and set a positive example.

Then again, perhaps communities of colour simply don't view aging as something to fear but to be revered.

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» geez... Posted by: Moira61