The girl’s father, Ralph Miolla, discovered his first gray hair at 12, and her grandmother, Annie Hogan, found hers at 14.
Zoe Miolla, 25, from West Haven, Connecticut, America, started going gray when she was just nine years old. The girl refused hair dye and became the owner of silver curls. It is reported by The Mirror.
By age 12, Zoe had gone 10 percent gray. As she matured, she learned to accept her “unique” color.
The girl felt insecure about her unusual hair color and wanted to “blend in” after being teased and called “grandma”. She dyed her hair for the next six years with the help of her mom, April, 51, but decided to stop dyeing at 18 when she entered art college. At 21, her gray hair had grown to shoulder length and she was able to cut off her remaining dark hair below. So Zoe became 100 percent gray.
“I’m proud of my hair. I didn’t always accept it and felt confident. Now it’s my hallmark. Now I adore it. People always think it’s fake and dyed. Do they really think that I dye my roots so often?”, the woman says.
Zoey now loves her unique looks and jokes that she and her boyfriend, 32-year-old Matt Griffin, are “fire and ice” because he has “fiery red” hair.
The girl’s father Ralph, a business owner, discovered his first gray hair at 12, and her grandmother Annie Hogan, 72, found hers at 14.
Photo: Focus collage
The girl’s father, 52-year-old Ralph Miolla, first noticed his daughter’s gray hair when she was nine years old.
“I remember this moment like the back of my hand. My father discovered gray hair and was beside himself. He couldn’t understand what the hell was going on. Later, he always reminded me of how beautiful our gray hair is,” recalls Zoe.
The publication notes that the girl’s father Ralph, a business owner, discovered his first gray hair at 12, and her grandmother Annie Hogan, 72, found hers at 14.
Earlier, Focus wrote that in the United States, a man sentenced to 400 years in prison was released after 34 years. Sidney Holmes, 57, who served over 34 years for armed robbery, was released from prison after prosecutors dropped the charges. A new investigation has found that there is no evidence to link him to the robbery other than misidentifying him as a suspect.
It was also reported that in the United States, a woman hit the jackpot by trusting her inner voice. American Wendy Hester was going to the supermarket to buy groceries when she was stopped by a “voice in her head” and advised to buy a winning lottery ticket. Now the woman can buy a house and pay off the loan.