Vanity Fair
Last night I took one of those Facebook quizzes – At What Age Will You Actually Be Before You
are Old? The answer was
17. The answer came as a shock at
first, but its validity is slowly becoming apparent to me.
As I face the mirror wondering whether I should continue
coloring my hair or allow it to grow back into the shade of gray that it should
be at my age, I am once again confronted with the fact that this time – I am
actually old. As my sister-in-law
said to my face: who are you trying to
fool?
No one, really.
Just my self. My
vanities. Thinking of the young
girl inside me who refuses to grow old and probably never will. The one who
still dreams, still cries at sad movies and enjoys a naughty joke. The one who still believes in love and a
God who made the world and who will eventually make things right.
And yet, my colleagues in school are even younger than my
daughter; my visits to the doctor (and to the bathroom!) more frequent and the
parties I go to are more likely to be golden anniversaries than weddings. Let’s not talk about the beautiful
clothes still wrapped in drycleaner’s plastic that are hanging in my closet
waiting to be worn when I go back to size 34!
When did I grow old?? Was it really at 17? Or was it at 22 when I learned of my
father’s death from a letter sent by my best friend while sitting alone in a
cold apartment in Amsterdam? Or at
51 when Louis lost his job and we had to readjust to a new reality and an
uncertain future?
Funny that I equate growing old with dramatic life-changing
incidents.
And yet, in my mind I associate coming of age with the
joyful events in my life – the way my father made each birthday a family
ritual; getting married at 21 in a simple church ceremony with my girlfriends
singing my favorite Carpenters songs in the background; at 25, coming home to
Manila to deliver our first born; the tears of joy when we found out that we
were to have another child at 34….
The list, just like the years, goes on.
So should I turn gray or keep going different shades of
brown? The action is still on
hold. I have booked the
appointment for the 16th of December. Then the expensive process of growing gray will officially
take place. Until that day comes,
I am taking a friendly survey – so far, half of my friends say, go for it! while the other half
are screaming – oh, please don’t!
Meanwhile, I’m checking out wigs, make-up for white-haired
(not gray for us dark-skinned folks!) women and the possibility of hibernating
in some dark hole till all the roots come out.
Louis says: I’ll
love you any way.
A reassuring sentiment; but … will I love me anyway in
shades of gray?
I made this recipe a few days ago because I had some leftover vegetables and few other bits in the fridge. My grandson loved it!
Vegetable Fritter
Ingredients :
1 big carrot, peeled and cut into matchsticks
1 cup shredded cabbage
1 onion, sliced fine
1 cup, shredded zucchini (for this recipe, I used leftover
sautéed broccoli)
1 cup flour plus 1 tsp. baking powder or 1 cup
self-raising flour
1 clove garlic, pressed
1 egg
¼ cup water
salt and pepper
Procedure : Mix flour, baking powder, egg and water. Season with salt and pepper. Add all the vegetables. Mix thoroughly. Chill till ready to fry.
To cook :
Heat oil in a frying pan, drop the mixture by spoonfuls. Flatten each spoonful and cook till
brown and crispy.
Serve immediately with your choice of dipping sauce : soy
sauce with a touch of vinegar and spring onions, hot chili sauce, catsup or
aioli.
Other vegetable options : canned or freshly grated corn,
grated sweet or normal potatoes,
finely sliced French beans.
I think it is also a great way to use up those little bits of vegetables
leftover from a meal. If you chop
them up and mix them into the batter, they will come out crispy. No one will ever know it’s a
leftover remake.
7 comments:
I have only had "low lights" added in recent years after returning from CN - dark grays and black. Now just a deep red streak underneath on one side that peaks out and surprises people. When I arrived in FL to help my Mom during her hip replacement recovery, she said to me over and over "your hair is so blonde!" ... Nope, just silver with some natural brown here and there. You are beautiful which ever you choose to do! Love from the States
P.S. So love the drawing of you for this blog!
For me at nearly 62, it's a hard decision to make. I tell myself that I need to look younger for work but in reality I am just frightened at how old or OLDER I will look. It is, in the end accepting your age and the fact that you are aging. I always have respect for those women who embrace their grey and look so good in it. I am nervous that I will not, so for the moment, the grey will have to wait! I am not ready to join the 'old'!
Carla, the hairdresser recommends the same thing - low lights of caramel and eventually adding more till the roots and the rest of the hair blend. It is one expensive, time-consuming process. I don't know if i can afford it - in time or cash.
I am tired of coloring. But just scared of looking ... very old.
I can take old, but not very!!
Don't do it, Alma. Maybe a just a tad ligher. . .
yes ... that seems to be the consensus. And the best solution.
thank you. Don't want to look too granny! No matter how much I am enjoying it.
I enjoyed very much.
Ana
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