My mother and sisters and I share many fine genes, including those for thick, curly hair. We might not count among our blessings, however, the legacy of hair that goes gray at 40. Even so, today we all wear our silver with pride. Lorraine Massey, co-author (with Michelle Bender) of “Silver Hair: Say Goodbye to the Dye and Let Your Natural Light Shine” might tell us we wavered for a decade or two simply because we had to reacquaint ourselves with, well…ourselves. Maybe, she suggests, we’d “forgotten the buried treasure” that was there all along.
A new perspective on silver hairYou may know Massey and Bender from their first book, “Curly Girl: The Handbook.”
With all of the Botticellian curls gracing girls’ and women’s crowns these days, you may not know that a generation or more of “curly girls” grew up with serious curl-aversion. In “Curly Girl,” Massey presented the notion that curls could be beautiful. She showed us the way to treat, cut and style our curly hair to maximize its splendor. She’s done the same, now, in “Silver Hair,” for women graced with grays — both curly and straight.
Or, according to Massey, graced with silver. “It’s a conscious choice,” she said. As to “Silver Hair’s” winning reception, she is “Amazed. Shocked. So unbelievably shocked,” she said. “I had no expectation of such a positive response. Before, we took away blow-dry clients. Now it’s the colorists.”
Some of whom insist, according to Massey, that most clients who decide to stop dyeing their hair will be back, gray heads in hands. Massey disagrees. “It’s all in your perspective,” she said. “It’s about body image and ‘owning it.’”
The women most likely to resist going silver, said Massey, are those in their 50s and 60s. “They don’t want to look like their mother or grandmother,” she said, or fear they’ll embarrass their children. They may have gotten the dreaded advice that gray hair is aging. This, notes Massey, says far more about the person doling out the advice than women considering a change. “What’s wrong with looking your age?” she demands. “This is life.”