Tattoos are Incredibly Powerful Symbols
During my time spent working as a Corrections Officer I saw many inmates with homemade prison-style tattoos; human  flesh used as prime real estate on which they eagerly advertise their  affiliation with a gang, names of fallen friends, teardrops on the face,  full sleeves, backs, chest and necks all adorned with crude bluish  colored designs.  On the right side of the law however, the decision to  permanently mark ones body with ink is not carried out so lightly.
And then there are military tattoos; the Navy being the most synonymous  with this age old tradition harking back to salty sea dogs emblazoned  with Popeye style anchors on their forearms, or Hawaiian maidens  manipulated by undulating abdominal muscles animating the Pacific Island  beauty into a hula dance. But that was back in the day and tastes have  become far more sophisticated since then.
In 2007, my husband began to bandy around the idea of getting another tattoo, one to  memorialize his time in Iraq. The  tattoo would pay tribute to the  sacrifice made when he re-enlisted  10 years after leaving the Army National Guard volunteering to deploy  down range with his Brigade Combat Team. He also wanted it to signify  the pride he felt in having served, and despite wishing he wasn't injured if he had to do it all over again he would unwaveringly return  to the Sand Box.
Being the artistic one in the  family I felt in my own way I would also be honoring my husband by  contributing to the tattoo's final design.  I enjoyed sharing my draft  concepts with him; like an excited  teenager I would present one idea after the other... "What do you think of this one?" "Here's  another variation on the same theme."  And he would always give me  constructive feedback on how it could be tweaked until finally he felt it captured all the important  elements of his deployment; the 1st Cav patch that he wore on his right  arm, the Stars and Stripes for the people he was serving, the dates of  his deployment, and the M16 personalized with the same number on the  stock and Aimpoint scope exactly replicating the rifle he carried in Iraq.

After weeks of back and forth, fine tuning  every detail, in November 2007 (coincidentally the same month he  received his Purple Heart three years earlier) he took the design to the  tattoo artist here in our town who I'm sure you'll agree did a fine job  replicating the final draft on my husbands upper right arm.
He now carries with him an eternal affiliation to his cause, his  country, and a time in his life that permanently redefined who he is  today.


		    Read the complete post at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PtsdASoldiersPerspective/~3/QMOMtevFgz8/tradition-of-military-tattoos.html
            
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Jul 19 2010, 12:20 PM
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PTSD, A Soldiers Perspective