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Tattooing

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Steezie

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I'm curious for the general consensus opinion was about tattooing. I know I've asked this before but I like to see how attitudes change towards tattoos as time goes by. Even in my lifetime, Ive seen a real softening of general societal attitudes towards tattooing.

I personally love tattoos. I love the artistic capacity of them, I love the fact that they are permanent, I love the feeling of the tattoo gun on your skin, I love how expressive tattoos can be and that you can wear something so personal in a very public position.

I dont have many tattoos now because of the cost, but once I have a steady source of income I plan for many more :)

One thing I get quoted to me a lot is the passage in Leviticus where it prohibits marring or marking the skin. As an interesting note, this practice wasnt actually tattooing as we currently understand it. It was done to mourn the dead and to show one's dedication to the dead.
 

Verv

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I am a Christian and one of the most conservative on this site.

This is what I look like:

o129712096.jpg


I plan to tattoo from my ankles and wrist to my neck.

My body is a Temple, and what is a Temple without decor?

If I make enough money to be independent one day, or if it becomes socially acceptable, I will tattoo my neck and hands and fingers and perhaps even parts of the head and face.
 
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PreachersWife2004

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I like tattoos. My husband doesn't (personal pref) so I have chosen to not get one.

I'd probably get a cross if I did get one.

I like to see tattoos and the creativity that is behind them. It truly is an art form.
 
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Blackmarch

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I'm curious for the general consensus opinion was about tattooing. I know I've asked this before but I like to see how attitudes change towards tattoos as time goes by. Even in my lifetime, Ive seen a real softening of general societal attitudes towards tattooing.

I personally love tattoos. I love the artistic capacity of them, I love the fact that they are permanent, I love the feeling of the tattoo gun on your skin, I love how expressive tattoos can be and that you can wear something so personal in a very public position.

I dont have many tattoos now because of the cost, but once I have a steady source of income I plan for many more :)

One thing I get quoted to me a lot is the passage in Leviticus where it prohibits marring or marking the skin. As an interesting note, this practice wasnt actually tattooing as we currently understand it. It was done to mourn the dead and to show one's dedication to the dead.
I'm against permanent tattoos, but I would not illegalise them.




I'll let the Temples built by God be decorated by God, and the temples built by men can be decorated by men.
 
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lawtonfogle

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I am against tattoos personally, mostly because when one changes in body structure (read 'gets fat') the things that once looked cool now look... well you can imagine it. There is one tattoo I would be willing to get, and that is one where you get specialized ink which is clear except when a charge is passed through it. You hook up a few electronics, and you have a built in cell phone/ some other electron of your choice. Tattoos with functionality is where it is at.
 
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TheOtherHockeyMom

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I'm off to get a new one today...it's a birthday gift from my husband. Got my first when I was 21, now that I'm twice as old, I'm going to get number 2. (I don't think I'll wait till I'm 63 for the next).
I'm going to do a Celtic cross on my shoulder this time, then maybe re-color the older one and work in the names or initials of my two little guys.
 
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keith99

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Tats are no tfor me. I have some friends who would not seem right withut their tats.

I see some concerns when it comes to minors as tats are not easily or completely removable.

There are also times I see someone with tats and wonder why that person has tats, they just do not seem to fit. I find it sad that people sometimes get somethign like this just to fit in.
 
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PreachersWife2004

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My son really wants to join the Marines, and when he says that when he does, he wants to get a USMC tattoo. I think that's okay. But if he came to me and said "hey, I want to tattoo my girlfriends name on my bicep" I'd probably set him down and have a talk with him. ^_^
 
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SmileAndAHandshake

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I'm curious for the general consensus opinion was about tattooing.

I love tattoos. I love my tattoo, my husband's tattoo, and the future tattoos we are planning.

No issues here. Other than the finances :p I can't wait to get my next one but oof, cost cost cost...


One thing I get quoted to me a lot is the passage in Leviticus where it prohibits marring or marking the skin. As an interesting note, this practice wasnt actually tattooing as we currently understand it. It was done to mourn the dead and to show one's dedication to the dead.

Meh. It was the culture of the time, marking of the skin being unacceptable for many reasons, all of which were cultural in nature. Times change. We gotta change too. :)
 
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jayem

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I am against tattoos personally, mostly because when one changes in body structure (read 'gets fat') the things that once looked cool now look... well you can imagine it.

Isn't that supposed to be an advantage of a tramp stamp? The lower back is less likely to get saggy.

Personally, I'm old school. Tats are not to my taste.
 
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Beanieboy

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I am a Christian and one of the most conservative on this site.

This is what I look like:

o129712096.jpg


I plan to tattoo from my ankles and wrist to my neck.

My body is a Temple, and what is a Temple without decor?

If I make enough money to be independent one day, or if it becomes socially acceptable, I will tattoo my neck and hands and fingers and perhaps even parts of the head and face.

??? Is that actually a picture of you??

That is really amazing ink.

How did a really conservative Christian begin to tattoo his body to such an extent?

My opinion of it is: Leviticus is not referring to tattoos that we get today, but branding of the skin. I suppose I would say that it will one day be like The Mark of the Beast, and getting the mark is akin to being branded and joining the AntiChrist.

However, tatts were once used to cover scars.

Today, it seems like tatts are seen on everyone and his grandma, like eyebrow piercings. Some are kind of lame. Some seem too cliche now, like the barbed wire around the bicep. However, I have seen some that I can only say are works of art. One was a guy who had his calf with orange koi and blue and green water and seaweed, in Japanese style. Another had his whole arm filled with a scene from Where the Wild Things Are.

When the colors are vivid, the design thought out and intriguing and unique, the work artistic, I think tattoos are quite amazing.

As for me personally, I keep wanting to get one, but am having a lot of commitment issues. I am going to see that thing until I die, so I don't really want the Dig'em Frog or anything. I don't want a random skull and heart that everyone has. I don't want the Japanese symbol for a random word, like Man, or Truth, unable to read Japanese myself.

I have considered Harold and the Purple Crayon, with Harold drawing around my bicep. I have considered the boy from where the wild things are. And I have considered the yin/yang koi in orange, blue and green because of it's beauty and tranquility.

And then I meditate, imagining myself 90 years old, with saggy skin, and a saggy Harold or Max. Am I happy I did it?

I''m torn. Commitment is not my friend.
 
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Verv

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??? Is that actually a picture of you??

That is really amazing ink.

How did a really conservative Christian begin to tattoo his body to such an extent?

My opinion of it is: Leviticus is not referring to tattoos that we get today, but branding of the skin. I suppose I would say that it will one day be like The Mark of the Beast, and getting the mark is akin to being branded and joining the AntiChrist.

However, tatts were once used to cover scars.

Today, it seems like tatts are seen on everyone and his grandma, like eyebrow piercings. Some are kind of lame. Some seem too cliche now, like the barbed wire around the bicep. However, I have seen some that I can only say are works of art. One was a guy who had his calf with orange koi and blue and green water and seaweed, in Japanese style. Another had his whole arm filled with a scene from Where the Wild Things Are.

When the colors are vivid, the design thought out and intriguing and unique, the work artistic, I think tattoos are quite amazing.

As for me personally, I keep wanting to get one, but am having a lot of commitment issues. I am going to see that thing until I die, so I don't really want the Dig'em Frog or anything. I don't want a random skull and heart that everyone has. I don't want the Japanese symbol for a random word, like Man, or Truth, unable to read Japanese myself.

I have considered Harold and the Purple Crayon, with Harold drawing around my bicep. I have considered the boy from where the wild things are. And I have considered the yin/yang koi in orange, blue and green because of it's beauty and tranquility.

And then I meditate, imagining myself 90 years old, with saggy skin, and a saggy Harold or Max. Am I happy I did it?

I''m torn. Commitment is not my friend.

Indeed that is a picture of me. :) There are more where that came from. I have meant to get photos of my tattoos down for a while now but unfortunately the last ones I did were from a few years ago and died with my old computer.

I agree with everything you said, really, and what I have to say:

- I got into tattoos as an idea when I was young. I was always way into martial arts films and Asian culture as well as underground punk and hardcore music; when I joined the military it just seemed natural that I would start inking up.

I always thought of tattoos as art and decoration, and though both of my parents are hardcore Christians both have a very modern edge to their Christianity in the sense that these are not the Christians who abhor and denounce things that are different, but rather focus on denouncing things engrained within society that are anti-Christian, e.g. Materialism.

I think coming from a good family who keeps a sober view of Christianity helped me to really do whatever I wanted, which I consider a blessing.

- Your commitment phobia is understandable, but here is something to consider about your wrinkled tattoo as you get older:

You will look interesting.

There will be no people looking at you saying, "Wow, that really old guy is very sexually attractive if it wasn't for a wrinkly tattoo.." All your skin will be wrinkled. :)

Rather, when I see old folks with faded, wrinkled tattoos I think to myself, immediately, "Wow, they were into it before it was even trendy."

I also make each of my tattoos an extension of myself and my person. Something meaningful and something I want to carry about -- no barbed wire tattoos here. :)

Part of the fun is sharing the meaning with people.

It can always be said of me that I wear my heart on my sleeve.

A christian with an assault rifle tattooed on their arm. Every visit I think it won't get more ridiculous.

Well, Walrus, I got it while I was serving in the US Army and I believe that military service is noble.

I agree with the John 18:36 passage that violence is definitely not part of Christ's Kingdom, yet I also believe sort of what St. Augustine said along the lines that part of our punishment on this Earth is the inherent hypocrisy we face of having to fight for peace and to fight to live, in a certainly non-ideal situation.

Do you want to discuss it?
 
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david_x

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I'm really thinking about getting a tattoo, mostly because i'm sappy and miss one of my best friends and a great cousin. *tear*

Anyways, I definitely should have a talk with my parents and some mentors beforehand as I do come from a conservative Church group. As long as it is okay or passive for most of them i'll probably do it.
 
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S

Steezie

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A christian with an assault rifle tattooed on their arm. Every visit I think it won't get more ridiculous.
A person's tattoos are very personal.

I used to make fun of people with tattoos I thought were ridiculous until I met a friend who had a tattoo of Baby Taz on her shoulder. We were walking through the mall one day and a guy stopped and looked, then said "That's the dumbest tattoo ever, why would you get something like that permanently on your skin?" She replied that it was for her daughter who had died a few years back, her favorite cartoon character was Taz and she got it to remember her daughter.

Best expression on the guy's face ever when I asked him how much of a jerk he felt like on a scale of 1 to 10 :)
 
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Sojourner1

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I personally don't like tattoos, but I don't have an issue with other Christians getting them. I don't like them because they are permanent, and if they aren't done well, they can end up looking pretty bad. We have always told our sons that they can't do anything permanent to their bodies until they are 18 (piercings and tattoos). My daughter has her ears pierced, but she waited until she was 15.
 
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BlackSabb

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I am a Christian and one of the most conservative on this site.

This is what I look like:

o129712096.jpg


I plan to tattoo from my ankles and wrist to my neck.

My body is a Temple, and what is a Temple without decor?

If I make enough money to be independent one day, or if it becomes socially acceptable, I will tattoo my neck and hands and fingers and perhaps even parts of the head and face.


More power to you if that's what you enjoy. But have you considered how this will look on you in decades to come? What about when you're 60+?
 
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