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Tattoos I woulda had

Everywhere you roam nowadays in our great land, you see tattooed folk. I wonder if the runaway U.S. tattooing craze of the past decade or so is connected to the rise in American shortsightedness (e.g., “What do you mean overextended? I’m buying that house!). More importantly, when I see how young some of the inked are, I often can’t help but feel they are traveling the road to regret.

But it’s important to point out that while I don’t have any body art myself, I have nothing against tattoos. Queequeg [1]had ‘em. Joe Melchiore [2] had one. Joe Melchiore, you ask? See, kids back in my time (a little after Queequeg) didn’t have tattoos. When I was a skinny high school wrestler, Melchiore was this legendary grappler at Highland High. Not only was he the best in the state — maybe ever — but he, amazingly, had a tattoo: A large feline on his arm. Nobody had tattoos then, but Joe did. It was boss. (By the way, you can see it here in this video; [3] while unrelated to this column, go to the five-minute mark to see Melchiore execute an amazing throw.)

Okay, let me get back on track. Perhaps my concern about tattooing is just about me: The worries of a person who perpetually, and sometimes pathologically, sees himself in others; the kind of person who sees others’ bad decisions and thinks of what he might have done in the razor-thick line of life choices. This person projects, so in tattoos of others can’t help but see tattoos he might have gotten pressed onto his self, and he thinks how, at age 45, he would deal with such in his adult life. He thinks in shock about his once self and his youthful predilections and the tattoos that may have emerged from them. Yep, I would have done some dumb things:

Perhaps the problem is just me. Maybe today’s youth are not, like me, cursed with philosophical impermancy. They’ll always love the same bands and the same people and the same teams. They’ll always want to seize the day and believe that while dreams only last one night, love can last forever.

Who knows, I may yet join the body art crowd. Recently, I realized that, quite by accident, the first letter of each of my children’s names spells ZEN. I was shocked. Z-E-N. Now that would be a cool tattoo (although, if somehow we had child #4, the names Ken or Karla are out…).

Scott Warnock is a writer and teacher who lives in South Jersey. He is a professor of English at Drexel University, where he is also the Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education in the College of Arts and Sciences. Father of three and husband of one, Scott is president of a local high school education foundation and spent many years coaching youth sports.

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