Originally posted by icantwriteI hear you.
Well I'm a student at Uni in my third year and I like tattoos 🙂 There's something very tribal about em that implies that the girl that owns the tattoo would be um... a handful 🙂 In fact all of the girls I've been with that have had tattoos match up to that description and the ones that haven't, have been exceedingly ordinary.
There is some truth to that.
I'm not one to make sweeping generalizations, however, it seems that in your personal experiences with inked beauties you and I have shared similar encounters.
I want to also add that women (or anyone for that matter) who decide to get tattoo's, shouldn't get them to make other people happy. You should get them to make YOU happy.
If you lost someone near and dear to you and want to ink-shrine your body THEN DO IT.
If you went through some traumatic event and you decide to show the world--_THEN DO IT.
If you feel like you really want to display some sexy symbol that represents you--THEN DO IT.
I do not have any tattoos.
So far, in my 29 years on this spinning orb we call Earth; I haven't had a strong desire to get one. I do appreciate them though. I am open minded enough to look past stereotypes.
So whether it's for inclusion, transition and remembrance or beauty and empowerment...it's all sublime.
It's just a matter of opening your mind.
Originally posted by inthegreenroomI agree completely!! My first tattoo I got when I had gone on holiday by myself for the first time, I went to Tokyo, didn't speak the language and it was a really intense but rewarding time and I wanted to remember it.
I hear you.
There is some truth to that.
I'm not one to make sweeping generalizations, however, it seems that in your personal experiences with inked beauties you and I have shared similar encounters.
I want to also add that women (or anyone for that matter) who decide to get tattoo's, shouldn't get them to make other people happy. You shoul or beauty and empowerment...it's all sublime.
It's just a matter of opening your mind.
I'm going to get another tattoo to commemorate my grandmother who I lived with most of my life and passed away a few years ago. Luckily for me she liked Escher and as chess is part of my family history I'm getting a chess related Escher tattoo 🙂
I might get another one at some point, but only if it's for a good reason. In a lot of tribes tattoos are a way of showing personal and family history, so it's not a fashion thing or a fad.
Originally posted by icantwriteA chess related Escher tattoo?
I agree completely!! My first tattoo I got when I had gone on holiday by myself for the first time, I went to Tokyo, didn't speak the language and it was a really intense but rewarding time and I wanted to remember it.
I'm going to get another tattoo to commemorate my grandmother who I lived with most of my life and passed away a few years ago. Luckil ...[text shortened]... oos are a way of showing personal and family history, so it's not a fashion thing or a fad.
Now that sounds pretty damn cool.
Right on.
Or is it:
write on... 😉
Originally posted by Bad wolfI'm not assuming anything except that you're a virgin.
You're assuming too much, you're assuming that from my perspective that there would be a 'right spot', but the case is that I think tatoos are ugly, outright, regardless of it's size or where it is placed, they're just ugly as far as I'm concerned, hence a turn off, I shan't be changing my opinion on this I can assure you.
Just admit you are wrong, certainly to think I would think the same way as you is wrong.
The 'right spot' is not a defined precise notion. It depends on the woman/girl and the tattoo. What is, however, wrong is your staunch claims that you'll never change your mind.
Picture this. You've come to love a person that happens to have a small tattoo. Do you not think it's possible that you begin to like her tattoo, like it's possible that you'll like that small imperfection on her ear? In fact, those things are individually hers and, by virtue of being so, your aesthetic appreciation for them also changes. Tastes are not immutable with respect to time, place or other emotional links.