why do older ladies have purple hair

In early 2000 I flew to San Francisco with my newly adopted baby. At 46 and still jet lagged, I pushed her stroller through our Oakland neighborhood.

Granddaughter. Right. I went home and dyed my gray hair red. It was my first experience, not of trying to look younger, but of trying not to be typecast by appearance.

In an enlightening Substack post, author Deborah Copaken (I love that she calls her blog ‘Ladyparts‘) recounts a story from a job-seeking friend:

“The hairdresser who was dying my hair was new and had never seen me before. As he was covering my gray he said something like ‘Maybe one day you’ll be comfortable with your gray hair and won’t have to get rid of it.’ I responded, ‘Clearly you’ve never been an older woman looking for a job.’”

I love that story because the last line is so versatile. Take out “job” and fill in the blank:

‘Clearly you’ve never been an older woman looking for a doctor who won’t dismiss your concerns.’

I understand the impulse to go gray. It’s just easier. It seems authentic. At 68, most of my friends have stopped dying their hair (On the other hand, at 68 most of my friends are not flogging their debut novel).

What I don’t quite get is the self-righteousness that can seep through, as it did with that hairdresser. ‘Maybe one day you’ll be comfortable with your gray hair and won’t have to get rid of it?’ That’s not really the point. But again, what a versatile sentence. How about:

‘Maybe one day you’ll be comfortable with being discriminated against and won’t bother to push back.’

‘Maybe one day society will be comfortable with your gray hair and you won’t have to get rid of it.’

We each make our own choices about appearance. If I may indulge in some extreme cattiness, I bet the ladies who flaunt the gray hair on their heads don’t allow their gray chin hairs to grow. In my life I’ve only known one older woman who did: a bold dyke photographer in the Bay Area who sported a goatee and looked quite distinguished. Had she chosen to shave her chin, would anyone have questioned her feminist/anti-ageist credentials? Not likely.

If we want a social movement against stigmatizing women’s appearance, I don’t see why older women should be the sole torchbearers. If we are going to stop dying our hair, let’s all stop, young and old. Same with makeup: If older women should not wear it then neither should the young. Unless and until we all go natural, let’s not judge one another. And let’s not judge ourselves as we change course over the years.

My own choices about gray have evolved over time. For years I dyed my hair blond and enjoyed the obvious boost to my visibility. As a biologist, it struck me that being blond conveys a similar evolutionary advantage to women as the peacock’s tail gives to a male peacock: Both are elaborate displays of reproductive fitness with no functional value, rather like the concept of conspicuous consumption as a marker of social status. As I wrote in a blog back then, dying one’s hair blond is a game, a sort of make-believe, an exercise in semiotics. It was fun while it lasted.

Then several years ago I realized that bleaching and dying my hair had made it unhealthy. I could either go gray or go bald. I opted for gray. The change in how people reacted was noticeable, As I wrote at the time, there was a sense of loss combined with glee in eluding the male gaze. That was fun until I became invisible in the grocery line.

These days I take a middle path. When I feel like it, I use a colorizing conditioner; no coincidence, those are the days that people say they like my hair. I don’t bother with makeup now, but I use a rose-tinted skin cream. As I approach my seventies, this conscious ambiguity seems a stage in transition to a facial appearance that just won’t mesh with being blond.

At church on Easter Sunday, at an outdoor amphitheater under tall trees, I sat next to a physicist who uses her white hair as a blank slate, a color palette. No invisibility for that crone: she dyes her hair purple. It is a statement about visibility and transformation that only an older woman could make.

Brava! When my hair turns white, I look forward to joining her. I will be happy to push my grandchild’s stroller to the park to show off my purple hair. As we said in the Sixties (when we weren’t mouthing some foolishness about never trusting anyone over forty):

As people go grey, many have an unattractive yellowish cast. With the application of a bluish/purple product, the yellow is cancelled out, making the hair appear white or more silver.
why do older ladies have purple hair

My own choices about gray have evolved over time. For years I dyed my hair blond and enjoyed the obvious boost to my visibility. As a biologist, it struck me that being blond conveys a similar evolutionary advantage to women as the peacock’s tail gives to a male peacock: Both are elaborate displays of reproductive fitness with no functional value, rather like the concept of conspicuous consumption as a marker of social status. As I wrote in a blog back then, dying one’s hair blond is a game, a sort of make-believe, an exercise in semiotics. It was fun while it lasted.

‘Maybe one day you’ll be comfortable with being discriminated against and won’t bother to push back.’

“The hairdresser who was dying my hair was new and had never seen me before. As he was covering my gray he said something like ‘Maybe one day you’ll be comfortable with your gray hair and won’t have to get rid of it.’ I responded, ‘Clearly you’ve never been an older woman looking for a job.’”

I understand the impulse to go gray. It’s just easier. It seems authentic. At 68, most of my friends have stopped dying their hair (On the other hand, at 68 most of my friends are not flogging their debut novel).

I love that story because the last line is so versatile. Take out “job” and fill in the blank:

Blue hair is becoming less common these days because fewer people smoke, reducing yellowing of the hair, and because better home hair dyes are available, so fewer women run the risk of bluing their locks with a rinse.

To fix this, many of them turn to blue hair rinses that can balance out the yellow color…unfortunately, as you age, your eyes become less sensitive to the color blue so many of them use way too much blue rinse. In their eyes, their hair is a nice, even shade of white, while the rest of us see a bright blue mess.

Have you ever wondered why old ladies sometimes have blue or purple hair? As it turns out, there are motives and mistakes that lead to the hair bluing. First off, many older women find their hair starts turning an ivory/yellow color that is hardly attractive.

BEST HAIR COLOR FOR OLDER WOMEN: secrets of a top hair colorist

FAQ

What does it mean if you dye your hair purple?

Purple as a shade of hair color seems to give people a sultry mysterious vibe. Purple is a color often reserved for royalty the pigment is a spiritual color and one that sparks the imagination. As Einstein said imagination is the spark of genius so purple is often associated with wisdom, fantasy, and creativeness.

Why do old ladies dye their hair blue?

A blue rinse is a dilute hair dye used to reduce the yellowed appearance of grey or white hair. The blue rinse gained popularity after Jean Harlow’s appearance in the 1930 film Hell’s Angels.

What does purple hair mean on a woman?

Creativity and Uniqueness: Purple hair can symbolize creativity, as it’s a non-traditional hair color that stands out and expresses individuality. Mystery and Spirituality: Purple is sometimes linked to mystery, spirituality, and a sense of inner exploration.

What is the psychology behind purple hair?

Purple is the color of intuition, creativity, mystery, magic and it also has associations with wealth, royalty and spirituality. These people are likely to be highly intuitive with idealistic thinking with a fascination with the spiritual and the unknown.

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