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At 65, I’ve Never Been Bothered by My Looks—But When Grey Hairs Took Over, I Tried to Dye My Hair at…
Im 65 years old, and although Ive never been particularly obsessed with my appearance, lately the grey hairs have started to win the battle. Not just a strand or twowhole patches, mostly at my roots. Going to the hairdresser doesnt seem as straightforward as it used to. Between the time, the price, and the inevitable wait, I started to wonder if it might not be so awful to just dye my hair myself at home. After all, Ive been colouring my hair my entire life. What could possibly go wrong?
So, off I go to the local chemistcertainly not some fancy hair salon. I asked the assistant for hair dye for grey hair. She asked what shade, and I replied, just a classic brownnothing wild. She handed me a box that looked rather reputable and understated, complete with a woman boasting glossy hair on the front. The label promised, 100% grey coverage. That was good enough for me. I didnt bother reading anything else. Confident, I went home sure Id be done in an hour.
I slipped into an old T-shirt, grabbed a towel, mixed up the contents as per the instructions, and slathered the dye on in front of my bathroom mirror. At first, everything seemed perfectly normal. The colour was dark, just like always. I set the timer and went to tidy up the kitchen and do the washing up while I waited.
About twenty minutes in, I noticed something odd. Glancing in the mirror, my hair wasnt brown at allit looked distinctly purple. I thought it mustve been the lighting in the bathroom. I told myself I was imagining things.
When it came time to rinse, I knew Id made a grave mistake. The moment the water touched my head, rivers of colour washed awayfirst a vivid purple, then coffee brown, then nearly black. I caught sight of myself in the steamed-up mirror, and there I waswith locks flashing lilac and violet highlights, a peculiar shade I couldnt even put a name to. The greys were covered, certainly. But at what cost?
I tried to dry my hair, hoping it might look different once it wasnt wet. No such luck. If anything, it looked even more vibrant and bold. I looked like Id stepped out of a disastrous teenage fashion shoot, not like a 65-year-old English woman. I couldnt help but burst out laughing at myselfwhat else was there to do?
I rang my daughter on FaceTime and the moment she saw me, she could barely keep her laughter in. She said, Mum what have you done? All I could say was, Book me in at the hairdressers, will you?
The next day, I had to go out in public like this. I wrapped a scarf around my head, but the purple still poked through. At the local shop, someone asked if it was a new look. Another woman at the bakery called me brave for choosing such a bold colour. I just smiled and nodded, pretending the whole thing was intentional.
Two days later, I sat in the hairdressers chairpride thoroughly bruised. The stylist took one look at me and understood immediately. She didnt judge. She only said, This happens more often than youd think.
I left the salon with tidy hair, a lighter wallet, and a clear lesson: there are things you think you can still do as you get older until youre left with purple hair. Since then, Ive learned to accept two thingsgrey hair appears whether you invite it or not, and some battles are best left to the professionals.
Its not a family tragedy; just a genuine anecdote.
