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Book Excerpts | 07/09/2009 12:00 am

Book Excerpt: Going Gray by Anne Kreamer

Read chapter one of Going Gray: What I Learned About Beauty, Sex, Work, Motherhood, Authenticity and Everything Else That Really Matters — and be proud of your true colors … Click here for wOw’s interview with Anne Kreamer.
By Anne Kreamer
I grew my hair long and styled it just like Peggy Lipton’s. I also tried somewhat successfully to make my tawny hair even blonder by spritzing it with Sun In and lemon juice as I toasted during the hot Midwestern summers. Lightening the color was my second step in changing my hair to create a new, improved version of myself to project to the world.

As a teenager my salient physical attributes were my hair and my — "no, really, I’m not a nerd" additional bit of ’70s pre-Goth rebellion — black nails.

And although mercifully I jettisoned the black nail polish in college, as an adult the long, straight hairstyle I’d so carefully adopted in high school remained a defining piece of my look, inextricably linked with my identity — as, I think, our particular style does for nearly all of us. Subconsciously, I believe, I thought my hair possessed almost talismanic protective properties.

But even as I maintained the uniform length of my hair, I began further experimentation with its color as a tool to assert my individuality and uniqueness. And over the years, my hair has gone through many, many different hues, from what I thought of as aubergine — but which a male lawyer friend once horrifyingly described as "deep purple" — to various roan and chestnut shades.

My first job right out of college was as an administrative assistant at the now defunct Manufacturer’s Hanover Bank, assigned to move money among the bank’s clients in the Great Lakes District. Yes, it was in midtown Manhattan, but could there have been a more boring job in the world? I sat at a desk opposite the men’s room in the front row of a vast airplane hangar-like open office space. (Trust me: there was nothing more mortifying for the twenty-one-year-old me than to have men by the dozen smile directly at me as they zipped their pants on leaving the bathroom.) My work consisted in its entirety of writing out paper-money wire-transfer requests for companies in Illinois and Indiana; robots could have handled the job. Row upon row of hushed, uptight people cascaded behind me in desk after desk, each row representing a notch up the hierarchy toward the glassed-in aquarium-like offices of the vice presidents. The few women who worked there in 1977 were blond and wore conservative suits and pumps. Wearing any style outside of the dull Brooks Brothers dress code was practically a fireable offense, so I dyed my hair a rich bittersweet color as a way to demonstrate to myself and to the outside world that I did not really belong in this death-before-my-time job. I thought the artificial color communicated that I was, like, you know, some kind of an artist who was working this job just to pay the rent. Which was true, minus the artist part.

I didn’t stop using my hair color as a tool to differentiate myself after I quit the bank. My next job was as a secretary in the international division of Children’s Television Workshop. And even though I wasn’t doing anything other than taking dictation from an amped-up, full-of-himself, would-be-James-Bond British salesman, I wanted to try on a more sophisticated persona than my kind of down-market-bank-clerk reddish hue, so I colored my hair a rich walnut shade. And I actually felt different. More sophisticated. By the time I started traveling for the job, selling Sesame Street in Haiti and Brunei and Malaysia, I already felt a bit like Mata Hari (and you know what the anagram of her surname is, don’t you?).

13 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Patrice Baldwin

Interesting subject. I’d never spoken to anyone about their hair until I decided to go from three or four colors of blond-ish to dark brown and very long to as white as I could get it. Well, I just couldn’t get reallly white most of the time.  I don’t have time for all that any more. I’m going to get it cut in a short, cute cut and let it grow out. God knows what I’ll find. It’s been shades of brown for many many years, but I have a suspicion there’s something very different lurking underneath.

Maybe I’ll get Anne Kreamer’s book first.

By Patrice Baldwin on 07/09/2009 1:32 am
Elizabeth Parrish
A good topic and I book I think I might like to read. My mother’s natural hair color when she was young was jet black, though I’ve never known her without gray hair – and she had me at the ripe old age of 22! Except for a short stint in her thirties, she’s never colored her hair. There was her skunk stripe phase in which the center part of her hair was noticeably and naturally grayer (actually more silvery) than the rest of her hair. For a long time, her hair was a mixture of black, gray, silver and white. I inherited my father’s hair and have gone from being a light brown to a dark brown that started graying, though ever so slightly, in my thirties. There was a point in my forties where I thought, “I’m gonna have to do the highlights thing.” I live in Spain where the most popular hair color for women over forty seems to be “eggplant.” It’s either that or the ol’ highlights thing. In the end, I just couldn’t be bothered to go either route. I cut it short since I really don’t like worrying about my hair plus I swim and chlorine, long hair and hair color are just not a good combination. Now I’m growing it out to about chin length and have no intention of coloring it. Funny enough, when I told my mother this, she mentioned that I might have to rethink this when I live in the US again (I’m from the Midwest). Most women in the small town where I’m from dye their hair and perm it too. My grandmother, God rest her soul, never had a gray hair on her head. And since her own hair was thin, she wore a dark brown wig with way too much hair in it that looked like a dead beaver sitting on top of her head. For myself, I’m opting for the “take care of yourself” route, but in the sense of eating well, caring for my skin and hair, exercising, etc. I turned 50 last week and, you know what? It really isn’t a problem for me. Not as long as I’m healthy and I keep growing and moving forward.
By Elizabeth Parrish on 07/09/2009 1:48 am
L. C.

My prefered hair colors have always been grey, salt & pepper and white. I wanted gray hair as early as I could remember. I remember one summer going from hair salon to hair salon inquiring if someone could color my hair gray. Needless to say I was laughed and told I would have to grow into this color. I was around seventeen or eighteen and devastated! I remember having a dream and one night that I had a head full of lovely white hair. I awoke the next morning giving God thanks for answering prayers only to discover it had been a dream. Again, I was devastated!

My mother had a community of friends whom I admired. They were remarkable women. I would sit quietly and listen to their conversations for hours. I was never interested in playing games like the other children even though I did. I was an "old soul." I often even to this day compliment women with beautiful gray or white hair. They respond with huges smiles and thank yous.

I can proudly day that today I wear my hair cut close to the scalp with with silver shining throuhout with white at my temples. I now get the compliments I give and gave as a youngwoman. I cannot imagine coloring my hair.

There is something wonderfully sexy about gray, white, salt & pepper haired  confident and intelligent woman!

By L. C. on 07/09/2009 8:36 am
deber B
I will never have gray hair.   I’m a highlighted blonde and will take that color formula to my grave! 
By deber B on 07/09/2009 8:40 am
Victoria J
Now who would have quessed that  DEBER B was a "BLONDE"…sort like those three h’mmm…. females on the reality show with that 80 year old former "Playboy"…you made my day…
By Victoria J on 07/09/2009 2:34 pm
deber B
A blonde bombshell no less LOL!!  
By deber B on 07/09/2009 3:28 pm
DL Simon

I’ll turn 50 next week, and do not color my hair. Grey is starting to show up around my hairline and sprinkling lightly over my head, and what I’m realizing is that when you go grey the pigment in your hair fades.  My hair has always been a bright (thanks, Granddaddy, for the red tints!) medium brown that lightens almost to blond in summer; now I see it fading to a mousier, saltier mix.  The idea of bright grey or white appeals (my father had beautiful white hair at the end of his life), but this unbrightening of my hair is disconcerting.  

So what I do, when I have time and remember to do it, is give myself a neutral henna treatment.  Neutral henna has no color, but it coats the hair shaft and gives it a bit more body and lot more shine.  Once I tried a light brown henna, which gave a result fairly close to my own color — it covered the bits of grey, certainly, but I’d have to keep doing it to (and I’m not inclined to spend even 2 hours every few weeks with henna trickling under the plastic on my head and down my neck) maintain that coverage.  I still like the neutral best.  

My mother’s hair (she turns 86 next week), after years of being naturally light brown, is now about 50% grey — but it still shines, and that makes it still beautiful.  So I think I’ll stick with my henna, which acts primarily as a conditioner, and watch the grey develop.  

Also — the woman’s hair on Anne Kreamer’s book cover is stunning, but not only for its color; she has a great cut!  My hair has that kind of body and (often unruly) wave, and I’m going to take a screen shot of this haircut and take it to my salon! 

By DL Simon on 07/09/2009 10:15 am
Victoria J

DL…If you do your own hair, go out to a salon supply house and buy "Shimmer Lights Shampoo by Clairol, or ask your hairstylist what he/she uses. It brightens both blondes and silver (Gray hair) beautifully. I went gloriously gray about 3 years ago. I just did not have any interest in have my roots touched up more and more frequently. Also I wanted to see what my hair would look like gray and I love it! And everybody else loves it. I have never had more women at the supermarket, on the street, standing in line at the movies, etc tell me how pretty my hair was. Interestingly most of them were my age or younger. Which made me wonder if they were considering it.  I am lucky or so every body tells me because my gray came in beautifully. None of my friends have gone gray…which is a laugh.  When we all get together, I am the only one with gray hair. So I joke with them whether they think people think they’re are hanging out with an older woman or the only truthful woman in the bunch?  I love the freedom it gives me from the march to the salon for a touch up and I love looking sorta my age. I am in very good physical shape and considered attractive,  As beautiful and beautifully coiffed as all my girlfriends are…they all look just alike…

By Victoria J on 07/09/2009 3:39 pm
F Fox

Again, there’s a very cultural and geographic cast to this gray thing.

When I moved to California,  I was amazed at the number of women who had highly visible roots for inches (!!!) and visible layers of different colors, like an archeological dig, and apparently were not at all concerned about it, compared to the meticulous and perfectionistic one-color dye jobs of the East Coast. On the other hand, many of the women I knew or saw in coastal Massachusetts were completely and unabashedly natural and had no qualms about it—from no makeup to totally natural hair, whatever color it was, including gray…these ladies never would have dreamed of coloring their hair; it was not part of their world.

Anne Kreamer is preoccupied by the same New York entertainment culture now that she was when she was a teenager. This culture places a lot of emphasis on artifice, making personality statements with your looks, and analyzing your appearance. She’s welcome to this culture, at which many people make their living, but the world is bigger than New York.

By F Fox on 07/09/2009 2:08 pm
Victoria J
FFox…I doubt Ms. Kreamer requires us all to march to the same drummer. You either wear your hair gray or you don’t.  Highlights and hair cuts, natural or some form of artifice are only accessories to your choice.  You hair is either gray or its not.!
By Victoria J on 07/09/2009 3:43 pm
Lizzie R.

I posted this once before, but was outnumbered by the few who opted to go gray/white. I’ll repost it here with the other ones who are staying blondes………………………………………..

I read the book and loved it. You ( the author) look good with gray hair and your still young face. If you get to be a lot older gray hair makes you look & feel OLD. I started coloring my hair in my 70s when somebody told me my hair looked like hell. I became a blonde and recieved nothing but compliments on it, so guess I’ll stay this way until I get really ancient and stupid looking as a blond, at which point it won’t matter I suppose.

By Lizzie R. on 07/09/2009 10:03 pm
Johanna Lolax

My hair is thicker and healthier since I stopped coloring and started moisturizing. I now have a face-flattering mane of soft brown-silver-white hair that my husband loves and others admire — and I’m saving money, too!

By Johanna Lolax on 07/14/2009 1:30 pm
Marlene Castle

It has been years since I’ve colored my hair but I definitely remember the last time -it was the first month that I missed having a period! That had only happened twice before in my life, both times were pregnancies. I was in my late 40’s, my hair was already showing traces of gray, both my children were in college. The first thought that flashed through my brain with stunning clarity was " I will not be pregant and gray headed!" Instead of picking up a pregnancy test kit at the drug store, I grabbed the hair color and went straight home, shut myself in the bathroom and dyed my hair. The thought of menopause never enterd my mind, I wasn’t "old enough" for that, not me! But in fact, I was - at first it seemed like an overwhelming situation but I have found it to be only a natural progression of the journey. Now 60, I am one of the few women in my circle of friends who does not do the color thing and it’s their comment that really amuses me - "If mine looked like yours, I wouldn’t color it either."  How will they ever know?

When my husband and I were on our way home this past April from a winter trip to Florida, a young woman in a restaurant stopped by our table telling me that she loved my glasses and that my hair was to die for! What more can I say? 

By Marlene Castle on 08/04/2009 3:49 pm