Friday 7 August 2009

When Considering A Tattoo, Put Some Real Thought Into Your Decisions

The story of my first tattoo is not an exciting one: no one was
drunk, nothing was misspelled, and it didn't happen in jail.

I was 21 years old, living away from my parents for the first
time, in college in New York. I had wanted a tattoo since I was
16 but waited for 5 years for fear that I would change my mind,
that it would hurt, that I would get a disease, or that it would
anger my parents.

As a 21-year-old, I thought I was old enough to make this
decision for myself. I got my tattoo (an all-black silhouette of
a crow on my right shoulder) at a small parlor, by this very
attractive lady who came in carrying her child. She put her
little boy in a nearby chair, put on some gloves and took me on
my first tattoo experience.

I was hooked from the minute I got up from the chair. Tattoos can
represent a wide range of experiences, emotions and reasoning.

Mine was a product of my love for the animal, its representation
in different myths throughout ancient and modern cultures, and it
was COOL!

I am a definite fan of tattooing in general. However, I don't
really understand the fad of getting Celtic knots when you're
not Irish, or pictures of Pooh, or flowers/butterflies just for
the heck of it.

A tattoo should mean something, at least in my opinion.

Something I didn't expect from getting a tattoo was how it
brought me into a completely different community than I was in
before. People with tattoos share a bond, even if they have no
other similarities. It's a bond of pain, of endurance and
permanence that speaks to the depth of feeling that you have for
something or someone, except if that something is Pooh or Tweety
Bird. Sorry, those tattoos do not apply to this situation.

I was pretty scared my tattoo would get messed up, but good
tattoo artists are really professional people. They take their
art seriously, both as a passion and a business.

I did a lot of research before I got my tattoo, so I could pick
the right place, know the right price and take care of my new
purchase with care so it would last a long time. By the way, be
sure to tip your tattoo artist!

My tattoo is only the first of several I intend to get. It's
been 6 years since I got my crow, so it's time to refresh it
with some more black ink and to place another memento of my life
on my body.

This time, I'll be getting two knitting needles on my left calf.
The hobby has changed my life, so why not? Knitters also share a
bond of pain and endurance. And both knitting and tattooing is
done with needles - it's a perfect match.

Personally, I can't wait to get it, for people to see it, and
remember as vividly as the first time, the first stroke all the
way to the last.

I gave a lot of thought and consideration to my first tattoo, as
I will also give to my future tattoos.

An older friend of mine got a tattoo on her left breast. Her
tattoo has proven to me something that I always instinctively
knew... Don't put a tattoo on something that will sag when you
get older. ;-) If you do, chances are that ten or twenty years
down the road, your tattoo will not look as awesome as it does
right now.

Another thing I don't get is the people who put a name of a
boyfriend or girlfriend on their body. Maybe they believe that
somehow by permanently affixing someone's name to their body
will help encourage a more permanent relationship with their
significant other, but doing so may also reflect the uncertainty
in the relationship rather than its permanence.

Some tattoos might seem wise at the time of the inking, but down
the road, some tattoos are best removed or covered over.

All I am saying is that if you get inked, make a wise decision
about what tattoo you should get and where you want to put your
tattoo. If you make these decisions willy-nilly, the tattooing
decision you make today, could be something you regret for a long
time to come.


Bree Levine is a full-time, freelance writer. She loves tattoos,
but she also understands that some people may need to have one
removed. If you have a tattoo that needs to be removed, you can
spend $1000's on laser tattoo removal treatments, OR you can
explore the Nuviderm Home Tattoo Removal System, which can
remove your tattoo without emptying your wallet. Visit
http://nuviderm.com/ today to learn more about the Nuviderm
solution for fading tattoos to extinction.

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