Maybe if you live in a dorm. Meaningless bimbo tattoos like tramp stamps, kanji phrases, and butterflies on an otherwise beautiful woman are akin to bumper stickers on a Ferrari and will never be praised. Exceptions are usually made when they're truly meaningful - like a small, easily-hidden, well-done collar matching the style and color worn by of a beloved dog that passed away.
24% of women have tattoos.
27% of those women regret getting them when they're older.
79% of tattoos done on women are done before the age of 25.
86% of men over 25 prefer women with less than 3 tattoos give the choice.
Tattoo removal surgery occurance has increased 500% in the last 10 years.
... that's just the way it is.
what do these statistics have to do with anything?
and its 400% not 500% off by a whole 100 makes me rather dubious of the rest i dont feel like looking into
I don't live in a dorm, so i doubt its that.
i digress the problem i have with your argument is that they are just statistics. When i look at the why's I see that
these people aren't hired
they are called ugly
they are believed to be intellectually inferior, because reasons? as well as what I've seen out of this thread
so it seems less of a conscious effort to undo a "mistake" and more like a subconscious fear of not conforming to societal beauty standards. Something that effects women a whole lot more than men.
the exceptions portion seems like hogwash... something that is "meaningful?" by whose standards?
anything can be seen as meaningful by the owner's perspective but that perspective is pretty much erased when others who don't get/ don't care about the reference see it.
there's a guy around with a dragon ball tattoo, so many people say it looks stupid, that he's a weeb, an actual retard
the only anime the guy watched was dragon ball, so he's not a weeb and the tattoo is in place of where he was stabbed
the show was all he had at the time and the reason why he decided to keep living and trying, hence his decision
didn't mean for this to be that long, welp, hope I've conveyed my reasoning