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Thanks for your vote...all your votes!I just checked them all.
Some cultures require it I believe....Native Americans were fairly big on painting...even their horses...but in early tribes tattooing was part of their culture and it was expected.Thanks for your vote...all your votes!
Interesting that you indeed think that the option "Even under 18 okay if local laws allow it" can be good also.
Maybe you know some under 18s who have had it done successfully, without regret.
I'm sure it can feel good to many under 18s, just as to over 18s; I guess the question of possible later regret does arise, but like you say maturity is not bound to a particular age, so you would say to them also, if mature, Go for it.
Interesting link; thanks!Some cultures require it I believe....Native Americans were fairly big on painting...even their horses...but in early tribes tattooing was part of their culture and it was expected.
Early American Tattooing: The Natives - Tattoo.com
Some cultures require it I believe....Native Americans were fairly big on painting...even their horses...but in early tribes tattooing was part of their culture and it was expected.
forums dot thewelltrainedmind dot comQueenCat said:Around here (Bible Belt), it is common, especially among evangelical Christians, for the girls under about 40 to have religious tattoos. More do than don't, especially when you get to the under 30 crowd. I hardly know any female at church that is under 30 that does not have a tattoo.
For them it was a very deliberate, unregretted thing, then, right?For my sons it was more ' yes, I am 18, I can make my own decisions - so let's get a tattoo ' ...
As opposed to how you dealt with it as your sons reached 18 and got theirs;To me it's cultural - obviously I do sit on the other side because I have a tattoo , but I did look through scripture and reflect on it before I got one- and it was also something I had to deal with as my sons reached 18 and got tattoos.
Great, reflective comment, thanks!With my son's it had nothing to do with my feelings as a Christian, it was more a reality check that they were making decisions that I had little control over.
With me it was more an inspiration , so I felt good about it. Not sure it was self discovery.
Glad to answer. It's a very topical subject.@farouk
Don't answer if you do not wish to. But I am confused why your so heavily into tats.
Glad to answer. It's a very topical subject.
With the prevalence of tattooing, the opportunities for faith based designs have risen enormously, even as in various ways society in the West is more secularized. So in a sense it's an off-spin that provides lots of opportunities that weren't there before.
Thanks for your comment, indeed.Thanks for the reply.
Over the decades Christian symbols have been used for unchristian meaning.
That leaves you question of how others looked at such tats. I honestly believe most do not look at them as Christian in purpose.
In the Bible there are tats, but all pagan.
Just saying this is something you need to think about.
Thanks for your comment, indeed.
Did you also read the quote in the OP? it's also a deeply held perspective by people in the Bible Belt, it seems.
Thanks for your comment; interesting, indeed.I grew up in northern Indiana, the heart of the Midwest and Bible Belt.
The only tat I saw was on my dad, who got it probably in the Army. Not in the Midwest.
None of the people I worked with intelligence had a tat.
Today only the south is called Bible Belt. But having lived in Georgia 31 years now, I would challenge the map. It includes far too many states with good portions of those definitely not heavily Christian.
They are calling Catholic dominated areas Christian.
That is a whole other topic.
PS: You might find that the portfolios would still be interesting and aesthetically pleasing if you could concentrate on looking at them; just an observation.We have a tattoo parlour here in my town but judging from the window displays it's not somewhere I would go in.
So do you remember the design of your father's tattoo?The only tat I saw was on my dad, who got it probably in the Army.
I'm really not one bit interested in tattoos.PS: You might find that the portfolios would still be interesting and aesthetically pleasing if you could concentrate on looking at them; just an observation.
This is fine, then!I'm really not one bit interested in tattoos.
Yes I do.So do you remember the design of your father's tattoo?
Re. army, these days military wives as well as military personnel are a huge demographic that typically gets tattoos, FYI.