Gray Hair Everywhere…

It took me a while, but I eventually resigned myself to my graying hair. The hair on my head, at least. In fact, now I get comments even from hairstylists that my cool little gray (read: white) streak in the front looks great. One woman even asked if I colored it that way on purpose. I tried not to snort on her. Really, I tried.

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Her comment was a bit extreme, but hey, even a thinly veiled compliment is worth latching onto at my age.

Yup, I was owning my gray, which I had earned over the course of what seemed like two separate lifetimes. I hadn’t been carded at a bar or casino in years (read: decades), so who was I trying to fool? (That was a rhetorical question. I wasn’t foolin’ anybody.)

The fatal blow to my Clairol Nice ‘N Easy days came when a pastor friend mentioned a sermon in which he quoted Proverbs 16:31: “Gray hair is a crown of glory; it is gained in a righteous life” (ESV).

Well, I wasn’t so sure I qualified for that “righteous life” bit, or that I wanted any sort of crown at all, but I had to ask myself: Why was I still coloring my hair? What was I trying to prove? I couldn’t think of one good reason to continue. Not the money. Not the chemicals. Not the hassle of worrying about roots growing out.

So, I stopped. And it was gloriously liberating.

Fast-forward a few more years to that morning from hell.

One morning I discovered that the only thing worse than waking up to find a few gray hairs on your head is waking up to find a few gray hairs up your nose.

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And where I saw that one hair, others began to follow.

NOW what was I going to do? After a futile Google search for “nose hair color” (apparently Nice ‘N Easy doesn’t have a tiny package for nose hair, although their R&D department is missing a lucrative opportunity here, if you ask me), I ran options through my mind. I saw only two:

  1. Buy a pair of tiny nose-hair scissors and learn how to nosescape, pronto. Knowing my history of clumsiness (I have had more stitches in my head than Frankenstein’s monster), I immediately nixed this idea. It could only end badly, with me probably snipping the end of one nostril like I was trying to recreate the digging of the Panama Canal on my face.
  2. ย Buy a nose-hair trimmer.

Oh, good grief. Had it really come to this?

It hadn’t hit me that I was getting older when I turned 50. It hadn’t bothered me when songs from my teen years started showing up on the oldies station. It hadn’t concerned me when I realized capris were invented for seriously middle-aged women… and that I owned more than a dozen pairs that I wore in a regular rotation from April through October. And it hadn’t worried me when AARP started sending me solicitations in the mail every two or three days, knowing eventually I was going to succumb to that offer of a free tote bag (read: another tote bag, in my case).

Nope. I lived through all of those things and never really thought of myself as old. But that nose-hair trimmer I now had to purchase sent me careening downhill emotionally.

Thankful for discreet online purchases, plus Amazon’s generic and ubiquitous boxes, I ordered a nose-hair trimmer and dashed up to the privacy of the upstairs bathroom when it arrived.

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I was being more secretive about this than a teenage boy rifling through his dad’s sock drawer. But, I soldiered on, reading the directions carefully before firing up this small missile of doom. I’d read some of the comments on this device on Amazon’s site, and they were both hilarious and informative. And they probably saved me a lot of weeping and gnashing of teeth.

My one piece of advice for using any nose-hair trimmer (especially while the batteries are fresh and the thing is making noises like a Boeing 747) is to ALWAYS KEEP IT MOVING. Be slow. Be careful. Be gentle. But ALWAYS KEEP IT MOVING. Do not linger in one area of either nostril for too long, even if there is a hotbed of blindingly white hairs there. If you hover in one spot too long, these things will sense your fear and latch onto twenty hairs at once like it’s a tug of war for their lives… and they will not back down. It’ll feel like your brain is being yanked out through your nose.

And let me say, these devices could probably do it, if you piss them off enough. You’ve been warned.

Is it worth the painful lessons learned to be able to leave the house without a proboscis full of pearly white hairs? Yes, indeed.

Have I gotten over the fact that gray hairs can pop up anywhere now that I’m rushing headlong toward sixty? Not really.

But at least that last area to go gray remains discreetly hidden from public view. And, even after that one episode of Sex and the City, no, Nice ‘N Easy doesn’t make hair color for that, either. I checked.

 

12 thoughts on “Gray Hair Everywhere…”

    1. Gosh, is that still true in 2019? Are capris still cool? I was only 1 when that movie was made! ๐Ÿ˜€ And maybe you can be a silver fox, but I guess I’m a silver cougar or something… ? (Not to be confused with the cheetah in that clip!)

    1. Gosh, is that still true in 2019? Are capris still cool? I was only 1 when that movie was made! ๐Ÿ˜€ And maybe you can be a silver fox, but I guess I’m a silver cougar or something… ? (Not to be confused with the cheetah in that clip!)

  1. I made the age old mistake of reading this with my early morning HOT coffee! And then I got to the part of actually using the hair trimmer…..hahahahahaha! Need I say more. Aced it again!

  2. I made the age old mistake of reading this with my early morning HOT coffee! And then I got to the part of actually using the hair trimmer…..hahahahahaha! Need I say more. Aced it again!

  3. No Bozo the Bush for you???? *grins* I’ve dyed my hair since 1988 when I was 27…31 years. I can’t stand the idea of light hair (one traumatic summer a couple years ago when I made the mistake of trying blonde for the first time). If I ever do let it go, I’ll be dousing my silver with all shades of blue and purple and fun stuff. (Not that I don’t now). LOL

    1. Ha! I think redheads have the toughest decisions to make about things like this. It’s so easy to let it go too long and then yes, you’re Bozo the Clown. ๐Ÿ˜€

      And I’m toying with the idea of a streak of bright royal blue somewhere off to one side. Just haven’t taken the plunge yet.

      Oh, I mean the hair on my HEAD here, of course. Not the nose hair. ๐Ÿ˜€

  4. No Bozo the Bush for you???? *grins* I’ve dyed my hair since 1988 when I was 27…31 years. I can’t stand the idea of light hair (one traumatic summer a couple years ago when I made the mistake of trying blonde for the first time). If I ever do let it go, I’ll be dousing my silver with all shades of blue and purple and fun stuff. (Not that I don’t now). LOL

    1. Ha! I think redheads have the toughest decisions to make about things like this. It’s so easy to let it go too long and then yes, you’re Bozo the Clown. ๐Ÿ˜€

      And I’m toying with the idea of a streak of bright royal blue somewhere off to one side. Just haven’t taken the plunge yet.

      Oh, I mean the hair on my HEAD here, of course. Not the nose hair. ๐Ÿ˜€

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