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tattooed
lady,
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tattooed
face, tattoo
or tattoo or
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my mind
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tattooed on
Tattooed:
body art goes mainstream
Driving through the
midtown section of Kansas City, you might not be
surprised to see a sign for Whispering Danny's
Exile Tattoo Parlor.
After all, it's a
transitional neighborhood where you might expect
to see tattoo shops. What might be surprising,
however, is that some of Danny Kobsantsev's clients
are middle-aged university professors.
Kobsantsev, who goes by the name Whispering Danny
(an acknowledgment of the tracheotomy that gave him
his quiet, gravelly voice), says that he is
currently "inking" professors in the fields of
logic,
mathematics, journalism
and statistics--hardly the edgy
crowd usually associated with
tattoos. According to Kobsantsev,
there is no usual crowd anymore. His
parlor draws clients from all over
the city and from all walks of life.
People
come for tattoos for all kinds of reasons.
Over the eight years
that his shop has been in business Kobsantsev has
had a steady stream of clients that keep him and the
shop's three other artists busy 10 to 14
hours
a day. However, he does acknowledge
that tattooing seems to be taking on
an unprecedented level of cultural
significance.
When he opened his
shop
in the late 1990s, the entire metropolitan area of
Kansas City had only three or four tattoo parlors.
Now the city claims over 200 such shops, with as
many as four or five artists working in each. That kind of
growth demonstrates how a
once-fringe practice has become mainstream. A 2003
Harris poll found
that 16 percent of Americans have at least one tattoo. A June 2005
survey conducted by the American Society of
Dermatological Surgery reported that the number is
now as high as 24 percent--roughly one in four.
Among
Americans age 18 to 29, that number jumps to 36 percent.
That means lots of tattooed girl and tattooed lady
and plenty of tattooed guys, some tattooed face,
tattooed back, tattooed feet, tattooed necks and so on.
A very popular combination is pierced and tattooed.
Perhaps part of the mainstreaming of the tattooed
subculture can be attributed to television.
Tattooed Athletes and
entertainers are plenty. Cable
television has given
rise to lots of niche programs on heretofore fringe
topics, and tattooing also with is one of them. The
Discovery Channel and the Learning Channel each has a
popular show that follows the ups and downs of life in a
tattoo parlor (one called Inked, the other
Miami Ink).
These shows allow people who might never enter the
tattooed world to take a front-row seat in the safety and
comfort of their living rooms.
And apparently many are not content to simply view this
world at a distance. They take the step of going under
the needle themselves.
What motivates a person to go through the painful
experience of being tattooed? Certainly novelty has a
great deal to do with it. People sometimes make
impulsive decisions that they later regret. A quarter of
Americans who get tattooed will later have it surgically
removed. What is at stake for the others?
It is more than an exercise in novelty, according to
Kobsantsev. People who come to see him are usually very
purposeful. Often a tattoo is a way of declaring
something to the world. To be sure, there are those who
get a tattoo as a form
of rebellion or as an act of
machismo. But just as often tattoos function in more
substantial ways--as a means of remembering or
commemorating something significant or transformative in
one's life; as a sort of talisman to gain power; as a
way of exercising and expressing control over one's body
after suffering some kind of assault or trauma; or even
as a kind of visual timeline charting significant
events. To be tattooed has become a means of
express
yourself and one's story in a dramatic way.
The way that tattoos function as a sort of personal
timeline is nothing new. During World War I and World
War II many soldiers and sailors received tattoos in
every port they stopped in. To be tattooed marked them as
men and told the story of their service. In this and
many other ways tattoos have served as a rite of
passage. In fact, while there are some who get tattoos
for the simple fun of it, Kobsantsev confirms that for
most clients, tattoos are a way of marking often hidden
realities in a visible way--which is just the way rites
of passage functioned in the past.
Twenty-first-century American culture lacks significant
rites of passage. Premodern cultures have always relied
on different rites to help people navigate transitions
and to provide meaning for life passages, whether a
coming of age, the achievement of mastery in a chosen
vocation, a new commitment or the loss of a loved one.
Often rites of passage involve some kind of mark that
involves pain and in some way sets the person apart as
different. In the same way, tattoos make a declaration
about personal identity.
To be tattooed is a phenomenon that has increasingly included
Christians. Perhaps it is not surprising that for most
Christians the decision to get a tattoo is one that is
filled with purposeful symbolism. Christianity is a
sacramental religion that employs different rituals to
outwardly mark an inward transformation. Baptism is an
obvious example. That many Christians have made the
decision to have traditional symbols like crosses, doves
and trinitarian iconography tattooed on themselves as a
sign of commitment or act of devotion follows a kind of
incarnational logic. Throughout history Christians have
used the tools and signs of the surrounding culture and
consecrated them for sacred purposes. Some Christians
opt for very explicit religious tattoos. Verses of
scripture, many in the original Greek or Hebrew
languages and scripts, can be a means of connecting
themselves to their ancient faith.
Responding to a question on this topic placed in an
online forum, one man described his decision to get a
trinitarian fish symbol tattooed on his chest. He said
it would be "a daily, visual reminder of the oneness and threeness of God, and how he is always present, just
like the 'tat.' The tattoo is also a lifelong
commitment, and as I commit my life to him, this image
will be on my skin for the rest of my life."
In the same forum a woman stated that her tattoos are "a
way of letting what is going on in the inside seep to
the surface." She went on to say that she spent most of
her life trying to blend into the background so as not
to be noticed. Her first tattoo was a way of showing
something of what was going on inside of her: it was a
"teeny tiny pink rosebud" hidden away on her back. As
she became more outgoing, she got a tattoo of red roses
on her ankle. Most recently she added an orchid that
covers up the original little rosebud. She says she did
this "because I don't need [the original one] anymore. I
am not afraid of letting people see who I am." Such a
transformation of the woman's internal
landscape testifies to the growth and development that
Christians believe flow from a life entrusted to the
love of God. But not all Christians who get tattooed are seeking to
express such weighty sentiments. One woman who has a
tattoo of a cross on her back spoke of the appeal of
doing something different. "Most people don't know I
have [a tattoo] until I tell them. I'm a fairly
conservative-looking person, so part of me loves the
shock factor associated with my tattoo's revelation.
However, it is well hidden and isn't something I
emphasize. For me, it's a simple reminder not to judge a
book by its cover. I plan to get another--strategically
placed, of course." It is good to be reminded not to judge a book by its
cover or make assumptions about people on the basis of
their outward appearance. Given the growing phenomenon
of being tattooed and the wide and expanding demographic of
those who get tattoos, chances are someone around us is
declaring something significant about themselves--in
plain view or just below the surface.
REMINDERS: "I wanted to take the
beliefs that I hold dear and give
them a visual representation on my
body," says J. R. Cillian Green, a
graduate student in the Chicago
area. He has 12 tattoos, most of
them with religious themes--some
include verses of scripture and
slogans of the Reformation--and has
plans for more. "I obviously do not
believe that scripture has condemned
the act of getting tattooed. The
passage quoted from Leviticus is
pretty clearly culturally oriented.
I don't believe that my ink is a
desecration of the temple of God
either."
Author Tim Keel is pastor of Jacob's
Well in Kansas City, Missouri.
COPYRIGHT Gale Group
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Tattooed,
tattooed
girl,
tattooed
lady,
tattooed
woman,
tattooed
face, tattoo
or tattoo or
tattooed,
tattooed on
my mind
lyric,
tattooed
babes,
tattooed on
my mind,
pierced
tattooed,
tattooed
back,
picture of
tattooed,
woman tattoo