You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
Depends on where you're teaching.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
Fuck that.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
This a thousand fucking times. I have a general idea of the tattoos I want to get but the one thing I will absolutely never even consider are names.Quantum Roberts said:Ooh. Thats uhh...yeah. Another rule of thumb to tats OP. Dont get names of your relationships other than family.LightPurpleLighter said:Make sure you can live with what you get for the rest of your life.
When I was young and dumb...OK, about 5 years ago, I still am young and dumb, but anyway, I got my then-husband's initials tattoo'd on my hip, right there where your jeans pocket is.
Bad already, right? Guess what his initials are? STD.
its a general rule of thumb. the fact you have to hide it is my point. y bother?ace_of_something said:Depends on where you're teaching.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
My best friend is a 1st grade (ages 6-7) teacher and has tattoos covering his upper body. However, much like during his job interviews he always wears a collared shirt and long sleeves at work. His principal didn't know he had tattoos till he was setting up his classroom and wearing a t-shirt (no students that day).
gratz that you can hide your tattoo, but does it hurt to not have anything to hide going into a job interview, or to findout before hand if they even allow it? you act like im telling the man DONT GET NO DAMN TATTOOS.Patrick Dare said:Fuck that.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
I have a bass clef on my left arm. Hardly anyone knows what it is, I get stuff like "is that a comma and semicolon?" etc. I want to get that arm done like my right (half sleeve onto the right side of my chest) and am thinking about doing what you are, turning it into a full sleeve with other music symbols. I don't think you have to worry about them job wise as long as you can cover them up. I have a few very large tattoos but I can cover them all up with sleeves/pants. I almost always cover them for things like job interviews just to be safe. Assuming you're not going to have them going up onto your neck or down onto your hands you should be fine.
As far as the design goes if you find a good artist, if you're comfortable with it, you can just give them the general idea and let them run with it and should get a great tattoo. I have one covering the bottom half of my right leg and just let the guy do whatever he wanted and it came out great. Which is another point, if you can find a guy who's into that kind of thing because they'll be more into it and so will probably do a better job.
This a thousand fucking times. I have a general idea of the tattoos I want to get but the one thing I will absolutely never even consider are names.Quantum Roberts said:Ooh. Thats uhh...yeah. Another rule of thumb to tats OP. Dont get names of your relationships other than family.LightPurpleLighter said:Make sure you can live with what you get for the rest of your life.
When I was young and dumb...OK, about 5 years ago, I still am young and dumb, but anyway, I got my then-husband's initials tattoo'd on my hip, right there where your jeans pocket is.
Bad already, right? Guess what his initials are? STD.
Edit: Regarding the pain I wouldn't be too worried. If you can take a light being dropped on you I'm sure you can handle a sleeve. Sure everyone's pain threshold is different but I really don't think tattoos are that bad, especially on the arms. The worst places on my half sleeve were near my elbow, collar bone and the middle of my chest. There were some parts of my arm where I couldn't even feel anything (and in a lot of places it starts to get numb as that tattooing goes on). The worst part are the lines, the shading/coloring usually isn't as bad. I've heard all sorts of things about how much getting your side tattooed sucks and how "I've seen the biggest, toughest guys get a side tattoo started and drop out because it's too bad" and yeah that's the worst place of all that I've been tattooed but even that wasn't too bad, mostly towards the stomach and back. Even if it does hurt you just have to sit through it, it's only a couple hours at most (unless you sit down for a monster six hour session or something but that's rare).
Sorry, I didn't mean like fuck you or anything I just meant like screw that, if you can easily cover them up and want to get one now then I don't see a problem. You do have a point about the money though, regardless of them affecting you finding a job or not they're expensive (unless you happen to be friends with a tattoo artist *shakes fist at my friend who has gotten like 4 free tattoos*) so if you don't have any money you kind of don't have a choice. My half sleeve plus chest was like $1,500 with what I tipped (though the same guy did my leg and he gave me a discount on that because of what I spent on the half sleeve and because I was generous with my tips). Which is also something else, it's considered common courtesy to tip the artist.DTWolfwood said:its a general rule of thumb. the fact you have to hide it is my point. y bother?ace_of_something said:Depends on where you're teaching.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
My best friend is a 1st grade (ages 6-7) teacher and has tattoos covering his upper body. However, much like during his job interviews he always wears a collared shirt and long sleeves at work. His principal didn't know he had tattoos till he was setting up his classroom and wearing a t-shirt (no students that day).
Hey if he can hide it go right ahead, but knowing that, y even ask if you should or shouldnt?
I say get the tattoos after your making some money. It cant be cheap to get some good tattoos. Its just more pragmatic to get it after then b4. Not to mention the guy can get some points with the kids he is teaching by making them think they inspired it![]()
gratz that you can hide your tattoo, but does it hurt to not have anything to hide going into a job interview, or to findout before hand if they even allow it? you act like im telling the man DONT GET NO DAMN TATTOOS.Patrick Dare said:Fuck that.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
I have a bass clef on my left arm. Hardly anyone knows what it is, I get stuff like "is that a comma and semicolon?" etc. I want to get that arm done like my right (half sleeve onto the right side of my chest) and am thinking about doing what you are, turning it into a full sleeve with other music symbols. I don't think you have to worry about them job wise as long as you can cover them up. I have a few very large tattoos but I can cover them all up with sleeves/pants. I almost always cover them for things like job interviews just to be safe. Assuming you're not going to have them going up onto your neck or down onto your hands you should be fine.
As far as the design goes if you find a good artist, if you're comfortable with it, you can just give them the general idea and let them run with it and should get a great tattoo. I have one covering the bottom half of my right leg and just let the guy do whatever he wanted and it came out great. Which is another point, if you can find a guy who's into that kind of thing because they'll be more into it and so will probably do a better job.
This a thousand fucking times. I have a general idea of the tattoos I want to get but the one thing I will absolutely never even consider are names.Quantum Roberts said:Ooh. Thats uhh...yeah. Another rule of thumb to tats OP. Dont get names of your relationships other than family.LightPurpleLighter said:Make sure you can live with what you get for the rest of your life.
When I was young and dumb...OK, about 5 years ago, I still am young and dumb, but anyway, I got my then-husband's initials tattoo'd on my hip, right there where your jeans pocket is.
Bad already, right? Guess what his initials are? STD.
Edit: Regarding the pain I wouldn't be too worried. If you can take a light being dropped on you I'm sure you can handle a sleeve. Sure everyone's pain threshold is different but I really don't think tattoos are that bad, especially on the arms. The worst places on my half sleeve were near my elbow, collar bone and the middle of my chest. There were some parts of my arm where I couldn't even feel anything (and in a lot of places it starts to get numb as that tattooing goes on). The worst part are the lines, the shading/coloring usually isn't as bad. I've heard all sorts of things about how much getting your side tattooed sucks and how "I've seen the biggest, toughest guys get a side tattoo started and drop out because it's too bad" and yeah that's the worst place of all that I've been tattooed but even that wasn't too bad, mostly towards the stomach and back. Even if it does hurt you just have to sit through it, it's only a couple hours at most (unless you sit down for a monster six hour session or something but that's rare).
Is it not sensible to be making money before getting them tattoos? Also Im under the impression that he doesn't have a trust fund to use here <.<
You realize you're severely limiting your chances of getting hired by doing that and you'd never be able to show it in class (word would spread).lolelemental said:I'm currently studying music and hoping to eventually be a High school Music Teacher
You're shitting me?! I mean, how could your ex-husband appriaciate that? xDLightPurpleLighter said:Make sure you can live with what you get for the rest of your life.
When I was young and dumb...OK, about 5 years ago, I still am young and dumb, but anyway, I got my then-husband's initials tattoo'd on my hip, right there where your jeans pocket is.
Bad already, right? Guess what his initials are? STD.
Most of the tattoos are Ponca native imagery. Thing is most people are antsy enough sending their innocent little ones to a teacher named [a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/profiles/view/iron+codpiece]Mr. Plentywounds[/a] (He let's his students call him Mr.P) So the tattoos just freak parents out more.DTWolfwood said:its a general rule of thumb. the fact you have to hide it is my point. y bother?ace_of_something said:Depends on where you're teaching.DTWolfwood said:You should probably get your career going b4 doing that. the professional setting still very much frown upon it. Id say do it AFTER you're already teaching.
My best friend is a 1st grade (ages 6-7) teacher and has tattoos covering his upper body. However, much like during his job interviews he always wears a collared shirt and long sleeves at work. His principal didn't know he had tattoos till he was setting up his classroom and wearing a t-shirt (no students that day).
Hey if he can hide it go right ahead, but knowing that, y even ask if you should or shouldnt?
I say get the tattoos after your making some money. It cant be cheap to get some good tattoos. Its just more pragmatic to get it after then b4. Not to mention the guy can get some points with the kids he is teaching by making them think they inspired it![]()
Cheating purposes? Oddly enough, I've done that before. I have two full sleeves on both arms, and there is a fair amount of traditional star and dot filler on them. I've written in equations and various other bits of factual data before tests because nobody would ever notice. I'm a fucking genius. Do geniuses need to cheat on tests?lolelemental said:so I most likely wont be needing it for cheating purposes
No, I can provide a picture if needed. It's true. lolham and red bull said:You're shitting me?! I mean, how could your ex-husband appriaciate that? xDLightPurpleLighter said:Make sure you can live with what you get for the rest of your life.
When I was young and dumb...OK, about 5 years ago, I still am young and dumb, but anyway, I got my then-husband's initials tattoo'd on my hip, right there where your jeans pocket is.
Bad already, right? Guess what his initials are? STD.