Choosing To Go Gray: A Turning Of My Soul

What's wrong with looking my age? I am almost sixty. I don't want to be a younger woman. I love my spirit and my body. I love this age I am in now--one of growing wisdom and longer-lived knowing. So, why do I need to color my hair to a younger woman's shade? This was not about anyone else. It was only about me.
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About three months ago, I finally said what I had been thinking for quite a while, "I want to stop coloring my hair." My hairdresser was shocked and her friend at the next station was horrified. The first thing out of both of their mouths was, "Don't, you'll look old!" That had been my concern, too. But not quite as much as before. My soul was making a turn towards something new. This urge to let my hair go to its natural color came from a deeper place than even I understood at the time.

Pushing my inner voice quiet, I followed the course of least resistance and sat there for my usual monthly regimen of base color, highlights, lowlights, and hairstyle -- a three-hour ordeal. As I left the salon with my hair spiffed and "cool looking," these questions rose clean and sharp in my mind: "Do I really want to continue this battle with my hair? Do I really want to sit in that chair every month?" I would begin my journey into answering these questions within the hour.

Out of the blue I decided to go get a sandwich at a place I had not visited for a long time. I walked into the store and standing at the deli counter was a striking woman with an energetic poise. Her smile was engaging, as was her beautiful head of full-gray hair. I asked if she had a few minutes to speak with me. We spent about a quarter of an hour talking about her transition from color to her natural tone. When I thanked her for helping me in deciding if I was ready to take this leap myself, she thanked me for affirming that she was beautiful just as she was.

The image of this woman's silver hair supported me as I went about my life over the next several weeks. What's wrong with looking my age? I am almost sixty. I don't want to be a younger woman. I love my spirit and my body. I love this age I am in now--one of growing wisdom and longer-lived knowing. So, why do I need to color my hair to a younger woman's shade? This was not about anyone else. It was only about me. I realized that I had somehow become a prisoner of my own appearance.

With my choice to let my hair go gray, I have had to chart a brave new territory of mind and heart. To my horror, I found myself in a tug-of-war with myself over a cultural bias that older women are somehow less worthy or even perhaps "shameful." This bias against myself is a hurt I have absorbed-- without choosing or knowing-- as a result of the ceaseless barrage from media and advertising that a youthful appearance is to be sought at all cost. I was soul-confused to find myself struggling with my own being to get past the subtly and powerfully ingrained idea that "old is awful." I am now winning this battle for my worthiness with gentle determination, self-honoring and a profound love for the spirit-driven woman I am -- and the woman I am choosing to become.

There is an emergent "naked" feeling to letting my hair go gray, a more open and tender cherishing of myself. As I am owning my years and the deeper living that comes with them, I am also a woman who:
  • Rides her bike with no hands and sings in the rain.
  • Jumps in the lake with her clothes on and laughs at the clouds.
  • Climbs up on things or lies on the ground to get that "perfect" photo.
  • Uses her feet as an extra pair of hands to close car doors and cupboards.
  • Watches television with her heels up on the couch holding her toes.
  • Finds herself dancing in store aisles when a great song is playing.

I have had two "haircut-only" visits to the salon now and am sporting about an inch of no-color hair. From what I can see, my hair is white on top, graduating to silver on the sides and then a darker silver at the back. There is an eagerness inside me, a sense of setting all of myself free -- the innocent child, the curious schoolgirl, the striding teenager, the blossoming young woman, the caring mother, the middle-aged career horse, and now the "the stepping into my age" elder.

I'm not 100 percent sure how I am going to feel about myself when I am fully uncolored. My inner self tells me it will be a comfortable sense of "coming home" to the next stage of my life. If it is not, I can always go back to coloring my hair. But I don't think this will happen. My heart and my mind, my spirit and my body are telling me it is time for me to step fully into my age.

Robin Korth enjoys interactions with her readers. Feel free to contact her at info@robininyourface.com or on Facebook.

To learn about her new book, "Soul on the Run," go to: www.SoulOnTheRun.com

You can also download her "Robin In Your Face" free daily motivational app by going to
www.robininyourface.com/whats-new/

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

25 Ways To Rock Gray
Amy Hempel(01 of25)
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Writer, animal rights advocate, and co-founder of The Deja Foundation (b. 1951)"A wise friend told me that your fifties can be the time you discover what freedom means for you. And she was right." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Ruby Bhattacharya(02 of25)
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Business development director (b. 1972)"The first one I got, I cried actually. I saw it and I pulled it out and I absolutely cried. I couldn't believe I had a gray hair at 15." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Lia Bonagura-Transue(03 of25)
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Artist (b. 1961)"Silver...It's the new blonde." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Linda Connor(04 of25)
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Photographer and professor (b. 1944)"I think of myself as being a much younger person than I think I appear. So that idea that I'm a wise elder has not gotten into my psyche yet." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Ysabel Duron(05 of25)
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Television news journalist and founder and executive director of the cancer agency Latinas Contra Cancer (b.1947)"In reality, the white hair seemed a minor thing to me. It was just another passage. It has given me a new opportunity, a new spotlight on the stage, because so many people now recognize me right away, and as I once said driving down the freeway, 'I don't blend in anymore...with all those brunettes.'" (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Jane Alexander(06 of25)
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Actress, writer, producer, and former Chairman, National Endowment for the Arts (b. 1939) "...I find now, for me, the way that doors are opening is by taking care of others in my life, meeting new people, finding out that they are thinking, what they are doing...but it is a bit harder because they don't present themselves to you in the same way. You have to find them and recognize that they are doors." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Mildred Howard(07 of25)
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Visual artist and educator (b. 1945)"...more importantly, life is a distillation of feelings and experiences that are common to everyone -- hopes and desires, blending the blurred boundaries between the hidden and revealed. What is important is that I feel good about who I am and to make creative contributions to the world that will live longer than I." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Miki Hsu Leavey(08 of25)
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Painter and teaching artist (b. 1952)"I started coloring my hair when I was about 40. I used semi-permanent color because of my illness and I knew I was very sensitive to chemicals. I realized that dyeing my hair gave me headaches and then finally I just decided to let the color go." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Barbara Klavert(09 of25)
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Renaissance woman (b. 1942)"I had just come out of the hairdresser's after having my hair cut, not colored. It was fully white then. A woman came up to me and asked where I got it colored because she liked it so much."
Grace Lehman(10 of25)
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Healer, writer and artist (b. 1950)"I never dyed my gray hair. I never associated it with age. I always associated it with the art of being." (credit:Vicki Topaz)
Carmen Dell'Orefice(11 of25)
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Modelling legend Carmen Dell'Orefice, 81, holds a pose in a creation by designer Norisol Ferrari on September 10, 2012 during New York fashion week. Ferrari said her collection for spring-summer was inspired by the 'curves' of film legends Marilyn Monroe and Rita Hayworth. (Robert MacPherson/AFP/GettyImages) (credit:Getty Images)
Toni Morrison (12 of25)
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Author Toni Morrison attends the National Dance Institute 31st Annual Gala at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center on April 07, 2008 in New York City. (Photo by Scott Wintrow/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Kristen McMenamy(13 of25)
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Kristen McMenamy attends the Chanel: The Little Black Jacket private view at Saatchi Gallery on October 11, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Mike Marsland/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Judi Dench(14 of25)
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Dame Judi Dench arrives at the Royal World premiere of Skyfall at the Royal Albert Hall, London. (credit:PA)
Ruby Dee (15 of25)
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Ruby Dee attends the premiere of 'For Colored Girls' at Ziegfeld Theatre on October 25, 2010 in New York City. (Photo by Ben Gabbe/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Jamie Lee Curtis(16 of25)
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Actress Jamie Lee Curtis arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of 'Hitchcock' at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on November 20, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (AFP PHOTO/Robyn Beck) (credit:Getty Images)
Emmylou Harris(17 of25)
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Emmylou Harris performs at the TJ Martell Honors Gala, Nashville at Hutton Hotel on March 26, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images for TJ Martell Foundation) (credit:Getty Images)
Julie Walters (18 of25)
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LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 07: Actress Julie Walters attends the World Premiere of Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows - Part 2 at Trafalgar Square on July 7, 2011 in London, England. (Photo by Ian Gavan/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Blythe Danner (19 of25)
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Actress Blythe Danner attends the 2012 Arts For Humanity Gala at New York Public Library on October 17, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Tyne Daly and Sharon Gless(20 of25)
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(credit:AP)
Ellen Burstyn(21 of25)
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(credit:AP)
Helen Mirren(22 of25)
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(credit:Shutterstock)
Joan Baez(23 of25)
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(credit:<a href="http://www.flickr.com/" role="link" rel="nofollow" class=" js-entry-link cet-external-link" data-vars-item-name="Flickr" data-vars-item-type="text" data-vars-unit-name="5bb66c46e4b0527153099873" data-vars-unit-type="buzz_body" data-vars-target-content-id="http://www.flickr.com/" data-vars-target-content-type="url" data-vars-type="web_external_link" data-vars-subunit-name="before_you_go_slideshow" data-vars-subunit-type="component" data-vars-position-in-subunit="0" data-vars-position-in-unit="6">Flickr</a>:<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/54707043@N04/7596027536" role="link" rel="nofollow" class=" js-entry-link cet-external-link" data-vars-item-name="n@89go" data-vars-item-type="text" data-vars-unit-name="5bb66c46e4b0527153099873" data-vars-unit-type="buzz_body" data-vars-target-content-id="http://www.flickr.com/photos/54707043@N04/7596027536" data-vars-target-content-type="url" data-vars-type="web_external_link" data-vars-subunit-name="before_you_go_slideshow" data-vars-subunit-type="component" data-vars-position-in-subunit="1" data-vars-position-in-unit="7">n@89go</a>)
Kelly Osbourne(24 of25)
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(credit:jpistudios.com)
Lady Gaga(25 of25)
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(credit:Shutterstock)

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