My Pink Hair Season: The Surprise That Made Me Feel Stronger After 60
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After I retired, I decided to do something fun before going to visit my granddaughter Charlie.
Charlie is a pink girl through and through, and I wanted to surprise her.
So I dyed my hair pink.
What still makes me smile is this: I was never really a pink girl.
I was more of a tomboy growing up. Pink was never the color I would have chosen for myself back then. But somewhere along the way, something shifted. Maybe it was retirement. Maybe it was freedom. Maybe it was finally giving myself permission to try something just because it sounded fun.
The first shade I tried was called Flamingo Pink, and I loved it.
From there, I went through my share of pink shades. Some were brighter. Some were softer, almost like cotton candy. Every version felt playful, unexpected, and just a little bit brave. And every time I looked in the mirror, it made me smile.

What surprised me most was not how it looked.
It was how it made me feel.
It made me feel free.
It made me feel strong.
It made me feel like there was still so much room to become more of myself.
I was not nervous about going pink. If anything, it felt energizing. It felt like one of those little decisions that ends up opening something bigger. It started as a surprise for Charlie, but somewhere along the way, it became something for me too.
That pink hair season reminded me that after 60, life is not over. We are not done becoming. We are not too old to try something unexpected. We are not too old to step outside the version of ourselves we have carried for years.
Sometimes all it takes is one small change to remind you that you are still alive in your own life.
For me, it was pink hair.
And the funny thing is, for someone who was never a pink girl, I sure do love pink now.
It Was Never Just About the Hair
I think a lot of women over 60 get the message that we are supposed to tone it down.
Tone down the style.
Tone down the color.
Tone down the joy.
Tone down ourselves.
I do not believe that.
I have often said, lean into the curves — you just may be surprised.
I feel the same way about this season of life.
Lean into the color.
Lean into the change.
Lean into the version of yourself that wants to try something new.
You just may surprise yourself.
Pink hair may sound like a small thing, but for me it felt like a symbol of something bigger. It felt like freedom. It felt like play. It felt like not asking permission.
And after retirement, that mattered more than I expected.

A Few Pink Shades I’ve Loved
The first pink that really felt like me was Flamingo Pink. That one started it all.
Since then, I have tried different pink tones, including softer shades that felt almost like cotton candy. I never expected to enjoy the variety as much as I did, but I really have. Every shade brought out a different mood — some bold, some soft, all of them fun.
If you are curious about the color I’m using now, I linked it below.
This is the pink hair dye I’m using now if you want to take a look.
What Pink Hair Taught Me After 60
This season taught me that reinvention does not always arrive in some huge dramatic way.
Sometimes it looks like a color you never thought you would wear.
Sometimes it starts with wanting to surprise a granddaughter.
Sometimes it is just one joyful choice that reminds you there is still more life ahead of you.
That is what this pink hair season gave me.
It reminded me that I do not have to stay inside the lines of who I used to be.
And I think that is worth saying out loud, especially for women over 60.
You are not too old to try something playful.
You are not too old to feel bold.
You are not too old to change your mind about who you are.
Sometimes the smallest changes wake up the biggest parts of us.

Final Thoughts
What began as a surprise for Charlie turned into one of my favorite little reminders that life after retirement can still hold surprises of its own.
And one of mine just happened to be pink.
For someone who was never a pink girl, I sure have had a beautiful pink season.
Maybe that is the lesson.
Sometimes the version of you that shows up later in life is the one who finally lets herself have a little more fun.
