The Scars Remain

September 23, 2008 at 6:23 am (art, culture, life, personal, scars, story, tattoos, transformation, writing) (, , , , , )

Noah has a lot of tattoos..below you will find the story of a Tattoo series. I so appreciated having the time to hear Noah’s story about what had happened during that transitional time in his life, and while this story just skims the surface of the actual experience, it was fulfilling to hear how Noah dealt with the pain of that situation. God speed (and more tattoo stories to come from Noah, so never fear).

“When my mom saw this she said, “But it’s going to be that way forever.”

And I said, “Yeah, it is.”

So it’s a human heart with stitches. It’s about what it’s like to be in a relationship and that come apart and why. It’s about my ex-wife and our experience; I got it very shortly after getting divorced. I actually tried to get it while we were still together, but I wasn’t ever able to get the timing right. I would have to cancel, or the tattoo artist would have to cancel. It wouldn’t happen until I was already separated, so clearly it was really about that. But at that point it was such a horrendous experience…without going into great detail…the experience of ending that relationship and getting a divorce really left me feeling like my heart had been chopped up.

Getting this tattoo was about healing, and is about healing. It’s also about the awareness that when you get injured really badly, emotionally or physically, the scars remain, but you will get better. But you will always have that experience be a part of you. As massive as it was, the stitches are there to show that it is healing, but that it will always be there.

So it’s not a bloody heart with knives coming out of it, but it’s also not a healthy heart. Another piece was that anyone I was going to have a relationship would have to see it…it’s kind of a bummer I guess for them. But it was going to be something that was going to come up, and it was never not going to be there.

The secondary response to it, was a tattoo I was planning to get while still married, but didn’t get till several years later, the Back Off Kitty Cat on the back of my neck. Again, I was interested in the visibility of tattoos, and so I liked that it was going to poke out of my shirt all of the time, and people would know, “Hey there’s a tattoo under there.”

This black cat with it’s back arched is the typical cat fair of saying, “Stay Away.” Which is something I felt like I had to do that to people for a while afterwards. So it could be cute, but it also had the meaning of, “Hey, I need some space.”

A few years ago…. I got this tattoo, and this was my tattoo to say, “It’s getting better.” I had gone through a emotionally turmochulous storm, but there is a shining star that is visible and is saying, “There is hope.” This is one, hopefully of many, that will appear in the night sky after the storm has gone. It’s funny because people don’t think this is real because it is so intentionally faded and soft. But I really like that the star is in the negative space. So that was my beacon of hope tattoo. Maybe there will be more in that series.

For me, tattoos are about recording history. People come and talk to me about getting tattoos and wonder what they are going to like forever. But it’s not about that. When it’s about recording history, you will have always been that person, you will have always remembered that time, and it’s just a reminder to do things differently or do things the same. So if you’re recording history, you’re never going to regret getting a tattoo.

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What is this blog about?

August 12, 2008 at 2:52 pm (art, culture, life, scars, story, tattoos, transformation) (, , , , , , , , , )

Many people spend their lives skimming the surface. It’s habitual: chatting, exchanging pleasantries, repeating the patterns of the day, and yet many of us are also desiring of the meaningful interactions, the deeper connections, the experiences and adventures that leave you with a story to tell. We are cut from the fabric of our parents, our hometowns, our initial experiences. But throughout our lives we sew those pieces together, and it is in the redesign, redirect, reallign, of our lives, and how we choose to tell the story of our lives… that is what weaves our creation myth.

This blog is designed to scratch the surface in order to explore the things that have left a mark, perhaps accidentally, perhaps on purpose. It explores the stories we tell, how we share them, who we tell them to, and how we live and die with them. I believe in the power of story telling. That when one person’s truth is told, than universal truths are discovered that cross race, religion, and age.

This blog, hopefully with your help, is also designed to explore if their is a relationship between how we tattoo and scar our bodies, and how we are tattooing and scarring the planet.

I find the submissions through people I know, people I meet, people I pursue, and hopefully…you. So please, scratch the surface, tell me what lies beneath.

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Change if for the better

July 21, 2008 at 6:29 am (art, culture, story, transformation) (, , , , , , , , )

Well….I just wrote a ridiculously long piece, and got walayed by the pleasure of putting two stories into one. Do tell if you think it distracts too much from the purpose of the piece, but I felt inclined to over share given that I am asking so many people to tell me their stories.

I was 19 when I tattooed myself. Like a good responsible not-in-the-grunge-culture girl, I waited for over a year until I knew it was not a passing fad or idea, but something I needed, not wanted. The back story is that when I told my parents I was applying to NYU for acting school, they answered with, “Save your time and our money and go find yourself a good acting school.” I did, and was accepted to one of the more prestigious acting schools in NYC. I should have listened carefully when they explained how rare it was to accept someone as young as myself, and that very few people my age had ever made the 80% cut after the fist year. But I was young; filled of confidence, and blind to possibilities that didn’t fit into landscape of my design.

Stetson, my teacher, the one acting teacher who was featured in the book I had read about the school, called me his favorite. And I was. I studied him as much as I studied the technique itself. I hung on his every word, watched his every move, performed as he wanted. In my youth I was malleable, and the acting technique was similar to one I had studied while in high school. The skills of being present, reacting with honestly, and accessing my emotions, were all easy for me.

What wasn’t as easy, was noting the obvious. It was Sandy Meisner’s last year offering classes at the school, and my first time performing in front of him was not only memorable, if I don’t say so myself, it was fabulous. The lesson was on following every instinct. Sandy’s throat had rotted out, I imagine from throat cancer, so he traveled with an interpreter who I nicknamed Santa Clause for his hearty belly and full white beard.

Sandy was small and shriveled, and you never knew if he was smiling or grimacing, but usually he croaked out these mechanical sounds from the hand held machine he held over his throat, and than Santa would interpret the tones into swears and insults that would make or break the dreams of the next generation of aspiring actors.

I was assigned Ben as a partner the day I was to go before Sandy. Ben was like James Dean meet The Fonze meets Elvis. He was Irish, and cute, and wore great jeans. But he couldn’t act his way out of a box and we all knew it. And so did he I guess, which is why he pulled the stunt. We were sitting there on the stage, the customary one prop in place, the bed. I only remember one moment. I was sitting on the bed, and he walked across the room, stood over me, and started to unzip his pants. “Your unzipping your pants.” I said. “I’m unzipping my pants.” He repeated. This was the technique, use the same words, but continue the dialogue. “Your unzipping your pants!” I said, meaning, you idiot, we’re performing in front of a legend, and your doing this crap? “I’m unzipping my pants.” He said. And so it went on back and forth until finally Sandy stopped us. The slur of mechanical insults flew from his mechanical box. I didn’t need the interpreter to understand we were getting reamed. I think he told Ben to get a job and never come back to the school, that he was unfit or unworthy to live. It was New York City. We were in acting school. That was a perfectly acceptable thing to say. And then he turned to me. I’m shocked now that I think about it, that I had the courage to even look up. I remember the blue of his eyes, magnified through his thick glasses. “You.” He said. “You were good.” And that was it. Those were the words that made my day, and I assumed, sealed my fate to be invited to the second year.

My acting teacher continued to say that I was his “favorite” in our class. And I ate it up. Still naive, and oblivious, I missed the banner that was apparently screaming, “Beware! Watch out! Don’t feed into it! Don’t believe the hype!” Because the girls started to talk in the locker room, and as we were changing for ballet, casually asked if I was studying with him….ya know…privately. It was a play on words. On our acting teacher taught private classes for students. But I knew what they meant, I was grossed out. He was like… my fathers age.

They told us they would mail us our letters that determined if we were invited back or rejected two weeks after school ended. I had complete confidence I was going to be invited back. I wasn’t a good dancer, and I rarely practiced my voice work, but I was a good actress, and this was, after all, and acting school. But during the last week of school, Stetson wouldn’t look me in the eye when we passed in the hall.

One week after school ended, I packed my bags, and headed back to VA for the summer.

That moment was coming that I feared the worst, the one where I was about to lose control over my life, that once again, someone was going to make a decision that was going to affect my life in a way that I couldn’t control. Before this past year, I had lived with my parents, who after divorcing when I was two, I moved between for the next 14 years. At the time, I don’t think I knew to the degree of why I needed to take control.
But now, 16 years later, I have a better understanding of what I needed out of that moment. At the time, I just knew that I wanted to claim my future before someone else could. So one week and 4 days after school ended, I got my tattoo. Two Chinese characters on my right hip that meant “change is for the better”. I didn’t know what was going to happen. But no matter what the affect, the influence, the reaction, the potential, the future. Change was going to be for the better.

A few days later two letters came in the mail, the first was the rejection letter saying that I wasn’t invited to attend the second year at neighborhood playhouse. The second was a personal letter from the director, apologizing for not inviting me back. I’ll never fully understand the purpose of that second letter, but it somehow vindicated the rejection.

I had already claimed the transition, the change, as my own. Change is for the better meant that the transition, not staying stagnant, being true to the truth, motion, flexibility, transformation, that this is what I wanted my life to be about. That was the icing on the cake.

Since getting that tattoo, I moved back to NYC and worked off Broadway, (as an extra). After deciding I didn’t want to spend my life speaking other people’s words, I moved to Arizona where I eventually became a wilderness leader. Five years later, I noticed that because I didn’t return to school that second year, I was in the right place at the right time to work on an Everest expedition. I have driven across the country four times, gone six months without sleeping in the same bed more than two times in a row, and guided wilderness trips in Idaho, Montana, Utah, Arizona, and Alaska. I moved to Richmond, Virginia to get a masters degree in social work, where I went on to work as a community organizer. After a run-in with cancer, I recalibrated, and re-remembered that being an artist was not an option. I started my own non profit that utilized the arts for social change, and upon falling in love with documentary filmmaking, moved to Berkeley California, where I started over again. I now work for a large corporate media company, where I sit. All day. And look into the computer. And I look around me, and realize that I am marked. I feel in my being that I am not of these people. The vast majority of the people I work with are in their early 20’s, they hopped out of school, knew what they wanted, and came here. I look at them, and I look back at myself, and realized the only thing I knew how to do at that time was to seek the biggest adventure in life I could possibly imagine. And now, I am at a desk, and I am seeking something else, the core of the soul. I am seeking understanding about the greater elements of what it means to be alive at this time in the world and why I am here. I am continuing to refine and understand what I am here to do, and how to be best prepare myself for that work. I still move every year. Even when I have been in the same city for 5 years, I have moved every year. Sometimes I get tired. I get tired of the part of me that seeks. That moves. That has to build a new garden at every new house. But then there is a part of me that knows that I have picked this life, and tattooed the commitment on my body. This one is not about staying still or staying safe, but rather it is about transition, transformation, and embracing change as for the better.

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And did you get what you wanted from this life…

July 15, 2008 at 6:49 am (art, culture, love, poetry, romance, story, transformation) (, , , , , , )

Dan has two tattoos….

“I got this one 2 years ago…just before a long relationship was ending. I got this because Raymond Carver’s poetry is this most important poetry to my life. And this one in particular crystallizes and reminds me of things I try to remember. That the good things in life are not physical things. not objects…that the stuff that I really value and want to go after is feeling, and experience, and fulfillment itself. And so this reminds me whatever happens from here on out, I already have the good stuff. My life’s already fulfilled. And anything else that happens after now is just gravy. Icing.

“And did you get what you wanted from this life, even so? I did. And what did you want? To call myself beloved, to feel myself beloved on the earth.”

It does a good job of reminding me of the stuff I wanted to be reminded of, weather it was because it is in front of me, or it was just time, whose to tell. But I think I have been more present with the idea.

Looking at the tattoo from Dan’s perspective
Looking at the tattoo from Dan's perspective

Outside of my life, I have spoken to more people than I had in my entire life before getting the tattoo. This (referring to the tattoo on his forearm) gets people’s attention. Clerk’s and cashiers in particular. People get a particular look when they are reading my tattoo and are trying not to be seen… so I  get to see people in those unguarded moments when they are readying and don’t know that I know.

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