Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I just find tattoos so "low class" and to be honest, trashy.
+1 if they're visible and all over I wouldn't hire you. I think it's a disrespect to your body to ink it all up and I don't want my kids thinking we condone doing so. If they want one when they're 18+ and paying their own bills then thats good and well, but until then, not in my house.
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Enjoy that bubble you've built, guys.
No bubble, just what I believe and everyone I know believes too. When I see someone full of tattoos, it just screams "trash" to me. Sure if you have one in memory of a family member, that is one thing...but when you have all of them over your arms, legs, back, etc....it just looks so trashy and low class. I would never want any of that on my body. I'm sorry but when you are 80 years old, are you really going to want that skull or heart or dragon, etc. on your body? No.
How do you know what other people will or won't want when they're 80? You don't.
Haha if you'd want that on your body at 80...that speaks for itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bubble, just what I believe and everyone I know believes too. When I see someone full of tattoos, it just screams "trash" to me. Sure if you have one in memory of a family member, that is one thing...but when you have all of them over your arms, legs, back, etc....it just looks so trashy and low class. I would never want any of that on my body. I'm sorry but when you are 80 years old, are you really going to want that skull or heart or dragon, etc. on your body? No.
Tattoos, even for people who have a lot of them, can carry a lot of meaning. I have a handful of friends who are heavily tattooed and each one to them is like a photograph, a memory of a time and a place and the people they shared it with. By the time their skin is wrinkled, their breasts are drooping, their stomachs are stretched, and their knees are knobbly, I think they'll be more interested in using those tattoos to remember the incredible lives they lived than worrying whether or not they look good in a two-piece.
If I got a tattoo on me, I wouldn't be worried about what it would look like when I was 80 years old. I would be happy that I was still alive and that I had lived a long and happy life, including the memories I had made, part of which would have been getting that tattoo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bubble, just what I believe and everyone I know believes too. When I see someone full of tattoos, it just screams "trash" to me. Sure if you have one in memory of a family member, that is one thing...but when you have all of them over your arms, legs, back, etc....it just looks so trashy and low class. I would never want any of that on my body. I'm sorry but when you are 80 years old, are you really going to want that skull or heart or dragon, etc. on your body? No.
Tattoos, even for people who have a lot of them, can carry a lot of meaning. I have a handful of friends who are heavily tattooed and each one to them is like a photograph, a memory of a time and a place and the people they shared it with. By the time their skin is wrinkled, their breasts are drooping, their stomachs are stretched, and their knees are knobbly, I think they'll be more interested in using those tattoos to remember the incredible lives they lived than worrying whether or not they look good in a two-piece.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I just find tattoos so "low class" and to be honest, trashy.
+1 if they're visible and all over I wouldn't hire you. I think it's a disrespect to your body to ink it all up and I don't want my kids thinking we condone doing so. If they want one when they're 18+ and paying their own bills then thats good and well, but until then, not in my house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Haha if you'd want that on your body at 80...that speaks for itself.
Just wow.
Judgmental much?
Tattoos, even for people who have a lot of them, can carry a lot of meaning. I have a handful of friends who are heavily tattooed and each one to them is like a photograph, a memory of a time and a place and the people they shared it with. By the time their skin is wrinkled, their breasts are drooping, their stomachs are stretched, and their knees are knobbly, I think they'll be more interested in using those tattoos to remember the incredible lives they lived than worrying whether or not they look good in a two-piece.
Anonymous wrote:
Haha if you'd want that on your body at 80...that speaks for itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I just find tattoos so "low class" and to be honest, trashy.
+1 if they're visible and all over I wouldn't hire you. I think it's a disrespect to your body to ink it all up and I don't want my kids thinking we condone doing so. If they want one when they're 18+ and paying their own bills then thats good and well, but until then, not in my house.
![]()
Enjoy that bubble you've built, guys.
No bubble, just what I believe and everyone I know believes too. When I see someone full of tattoos, it just screams "trash" to me. Sure if you have one in memory of a family member, that is one thing...but when you have all of them over your arms, legs, back, etc....it just looks so trashy and low class. I would never want any of that on my body. I'm sorry but when you are 80 years old, are you really going to want that skull or heart or dragon, etc. on your body? No.
How do you know what other people will or won't want when they're 80? You don't.
Haha if you'd want that on your body at 80...that speaks for itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I just find tattoos so "low class" and to be honest, trashy.
+1 if they're visible and all over I wouldn't hire you. I think it's a disrespect to your body to ink it all up and I don't want my kids thinking we condone doing so. If they want one when they're 18+ and paying their own bills then thats good and well, but until then, not in my house.
![]()
Enjoy that bubble you've built, guys.
No bubble, just what I believe and everyone I know believes too. When I see someone full of tattoos, it just screams "trash" to me. Sure if you have one in memory of a family member, that is one thing...but when you have all of them over your arms, legs, back, etc....it just looks so trashy and low class. I would never want any of that on my body. I'm sorry but when you are 80 years old, are you really going to want that skull or heart or dragon, etc. on your body? No.
How do you know what other people will or won't want when they're 80? You don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a poster said a while ago, it is very hard to be tolerant of intolerance. I can't be tolerant of sheltering children from others who are different in appearance and teaching young children intolerance.
Having a tattoo is not a difference in appearance. It's a choice.
It's not like a weight/height difference, hair or eye color difference, or even a race difference. It's a bold choice that YOU make and YOU risk being discriminated against. Don't act like a victim please. While I have no problem with tattoos and even have a small one myself, please don't try to compare this to say racial discrimination.