These Gray Hairs

I have a few gray hairs that have sprouted right along my hairline.

And while I’ve read that it’s not necessarily “good” to pluck them, occasionally I do.

When I’m putting my hair up in a ponytail or a high bun and I have a troll doll-esque spikey hair sticking straight up, I pluck it, sue me.

I’m not ashamed of you, I tell the hair as I zone in on it with my tweezers, I just don’t need an Alfalfa gray blowing in the wind today, that’s all.

And it always responds by growing back, sometimes sharper, coarser, sometimes without fanfare.

Sometimes I’ll pull my hair up and see a long streak of gray slithering all the way into the rubber band and think, wow, you made it! You’ve joined the rest of the girls. Welcome.

But then I’ll stare at it for a few seconds more thinking, I have a gray hair. I am old enough to have gray hair.

Depending on which articles you read, some say that grays right along your hairline can be a product of your facewash. And having had acne prone skin for most of my life, I know I’ve subjected my face (and my hairline, apparently) to some harsh(ish) chemicals.

I’ve gone through periods of my life when my skin was in rough shape and it was the only thing I could think about. I was convinced that everyone I talked to was just staring at the bright, painful breakouts that pulsed under my skin. I was convinced they made me ugly and undesirable, and I tried everything from peels to drinking gallons of water to cutting out sugar and/or dairy to try to see improvement.

These days my skin seems to be content with whatever I’m doing correctly, though I’ve learned to anticipate its sudden shifts and demands. I haven’t reached a place where I love having breakouts, but I no longer pick at my skin, and no longer feel the soul deep devastation I once did when a pimple appears on my jawline or chin.

I’ve forced myself to notice how unphased I am by people with breakouts. By how quickly I stop noticing a pimple on a friend’s face. The same goes when their hair is frizzy, or if they’re not wearing any makeup. And I’ve tried my best to apply that as a balm to my own insecurities.

Sure, they might see that my skin isn’t “glassy”, with no pores, no scarring, no redness; they might see spots of my makeup that have slipped during the day or become oily; they might see the tiny gray hair flapping in the wind, or the chin hair that somehow escaped my hunting tweezers, but it’s not all there is to see.

If I continue to have the privilege to age, I’m going to get more gray hairs, and my skin might change again and again, forcing me to learn new ways to engage with it. And with the normalizing of plastic surgery, of anti-aging products, of diets and pills promising to help me stay youthful, it’s going to take a particular mindset to remain optimistic and complimentary towards myself. To look in the mirror and see what’s beautiful rather than search for what I’m told is not.

When little wrinkles inevitably appear on my face, when my hair really starts to go gray, when I start to look, by all accounts, older, I don’t want to spend that season of my life solely trying to look younger. I want to marvel at the fact that I lived long enough to earn wrinkles and gray hairs and the occasional ache and pain.

It won’t be easy, I’m sure, it might be really really hard, but it’s not something that everyone gets to do, so I want to be grateful if I get to experience it—the chance to be young and old.

For now, I’m just trying to let these gray hairs lead the charge.

Even the Alflafas.



33 responses to “These Gray Hairs”

  1. I got my first grey hair at 26, and I’ve long since made peace with grey. However, I have a challenge with letting in the old-man. My site is full of pics with me engaging in the young-man’s-game. Again, life in itself is forcing me to slow my pace, and I’m slowly making peace with that too.
    March on, brave one… And sent with blessings.

  2. As grandpa used to say…..Growing old is not for sissies! That said, I think your perspective is great!

  3. I used to nurse a long grey/silver strand from my 20’s because when I got older, I wanted to have long silver hair. 🙂 But, you’re right, they tend to look less silvery, shimmery, but grey and like antennae’s. But, I am older now, and I guess I’ve always had a bit of a privilege of looking younger, so I still do. But, one thing I’ve noticed in being older is that we get the grace to accept it, as well. I don’t wear the make up I used to. When I have good hair days, I celebrate. My hubby just said that I look beautiful when I asked what he thought of my grey hairs. And, then he added, “And, you look sweet.” Awwwe. That was kind. I say, embrace every season, girl!!! And, THANK YOU that in your younger years, you are already respecting and processing the things that don’t matter, but that sometimes hurts as we get older, as we realize…we’re getting older. I’m just thankful that God said in His Word that grey hair is a crown of splendor and that even to our grey hairs, He would sustain us! Selah. Have a beautiful week, Kimberlee with two ee’s!!! 😀

  4. Martin Cororan Avatar
    Martin Cororan

    I overcame this challenge by heroically going bald.

  5. This is such a gentle and honest reflection on aging and self-acceptance. Really lovely perspective.

  6. I dreaded it when I found my first white hair strain. But I am slowly accepting that aging can be a beautiful thing… it is still rough at times 😦

  7. I’ve had grays since high school. Dye can fix that. Gettjng older is a blessing. Might as well embrace it. Great post!

  8. Love my greys (in my early thirties).

  9. I love the silver in my hair. But I agree growing older is sometimes scary, not because of what it really is but because it’s not like they told us how it would be

  10. nightoriginal41d828a593 Avatar
    nightoriginal41d828a593

    When I was younger I used to have curly ginger hair. Now I’m almost bald with a little bit of white

  11. Just this morning I thought about an imaginary conversation with an inquisitive 8-year-old who is bound to say “You’re old!” And what will I say? “I feel lucky if I get to be old.”

  12. Honestly, I never cared about my gray hairs. I started getting them when I was 17 or 18. I stopped dying my hair in my mid twenties. I care more about pain and soreness from activities that didn’t bother my body earlier 😉

  13. I started going grey in my teens…now I’m on the wrong side of 65 and completely grey….when did that happen. I quite like it though. I’m told its fashionable now. The wrinkles…not so much, but the come, and you have to deal with them. Just glad to be still here. Lovely blog, I enjoyed reading it.

  14. I finally embraced my greys during Covid after decades of bleaching my hair blonde. You know what? It’s AWESOME. In addition, when I go to get my hair trimmed, other stylists in the salon ask my hairdresser how she gets my hair that color. She tells them it’s all me. I sometimes wonder why I spent so much of my life not being myself. Let the greys be. Enjoy the passing of time.

  15. I’m 29 and I have many strands of grey hair now. It doesn’t bother me at all!

  16. Enjoy the process. My hair is now white, where I have hair. Actually, I have hair in some amazing places now, but no longer on top of my head! Every now and then I toy with the idea of changing the colour, or perhaps simply adding some colour… but how tiresome. I love my old face and all the life it took to make it this way. My father passed into mystery three decades sooner than where I am now, and never had the chance to consider his enviable hairline. 😉

  17. There’s something quietly powerful about the way this post speaks without trying to shout. It feels less like advice and more like someone sitting beside the reader for a moment and saying, “you’re allowed to feel this too.”

    What stayed with me most was the emotional honesty beneath the words. In a world obsessed with polished endings, posts like this remind us that real growth often happens in unfinished thoughts, silent resilience, and the small choices nobody applauds.

    Sometimes the gentlest writing carries the deepest echo. Thank you for sharing a piece that feels human instead of performative. What inspired you to write this particular reflection?

  18. Growing old is a sign of continue beauty 🙂

  19. I got my first two grey hairs a few weeks ago. Just turned 37. Cried to my husband about it for 5 mins straight saying “great you’re gonna look for someone younger now” he’s 47. Now I just think.. girls literally go to the salon to get silver hair. So I’m just getting mine for free. I resolved to just leaving them in should I find them.

  20. Grey hair…to love it or leave it is a struggle so many of us face. The beauty is that we can decide and then we can change our mind.

  21. All are just evidence that you have lived. Embrace the adventure.

  22. I have been silver for quite a few years now. I struggled with it. Went full on silver, back to brunette, kind of blonde and then back to au natural. Saving money is great, lol. Enjoy the journey 🙂

  23. I can relate to this, I cover mine – box blonde here lol.

  24. Such a warm and relatable reflection — really liked the way you captured this small moment.

  25. I just got my first Grey hair at 55! I texted my dad and said, You’ll be happy to know dad, Ive reached maturity!! Hahhaha

  26. Thank you for the wonderful, humorous insight you’ve written. I laughed to hear you say you don’t like the alfalfa strands, my very reaction to such renegades. I, too, am surpised by the face in the mirror when I see the changes time and life has bestowed. I also agree we are privilaged to grow old. I worked with very ill cancer patients and one didn’t walk into the chemo area and complain about their birthday or ‘getting old’. I learned so much from them about gratitude for now and will always be grateful!

  27. Haha..Grey hairs are strange! they arrive quietly, but carry entire stories of survival, growth, heartbreak, and time within them 🙂

  28. Getting aged is enough to get grey hairs

  29. What a lovely, beautifully written post. Gray hair found me comparatively early in life. I really wouldn’t have minded them if they were definitive proof of wisdom, but instead, they just feel like another chore added to my daily routine!

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