Meet Alyssa Williams:
Tattoo Stories:
I got my first tattoo (a tiny star, now covered by a blue rose) when I was 18 and finishing my senior year of high school. It was rather impulsive, like many of my tattoos, and I hadn't really thought much about getting any up until that time.
I guess
you could say they are addictive because a few months after my first tiny spot
of ink I decided that the flowers from the inside of an Alkaline Trio album
would look really cool on my neck. Tattooing your neck when you’re 18-years-old
isn't usually an impulse decision your parents totally support, and this was no
exception. They have never been upset or angry about my tattoos, but more so
just hoping I won't get any more. Thankfully, I still love my neck tattoo six
years later.
I had never loved my star tattoo like I loved the lilies on my neck and this caught up with me once I graduated from college. The star was fading, the people who did it were rude, and one of the lines was crooked. I always loved floral, especially vintage looking floral such as roses, which is why I decided this would make the perfect cover-up.
The need for more
ink continued to grow as I reached my 24th birthday. I had long thought about
getting a tattoo with a Blink 182 theme, as this had been my favorite band
since I was ten. I could never make up my mind on exactly what I wanted though,
so like many of my tattoos the result was impulsive. I wouldn't say I had a
poor experience in high school, but with my favorite band being of a genre
different from most, in combination with my awkward social skills, I
was not the coolest kid in school. It was strange, because
when I went to college I had anticipated my interests would not
be the thing that would make friends, but it was quite the opposite. Some of my
best nights included sing-alongs with my new friends (now best friends) to the
songs that no one from my hometown knew the lyrics to. It also included just
weird sorts of fun with parties celebrating Betty White's birthday, blow up
flamingos, and whatever various props and instruments we could find to
entertain ourselves. That's why when I got my latest tattoo it seemed fitting
to get the lyrics "I think I'm different ... This is where I belong"
from Blink 182's song "Pathetic."
I am proud of my tattoos, and against my mother's wishes, hope for more. I don't mind when people inquire about them; I suppose it's more so the manner in which they do. There is always the occasional person who is against tattoos and feels the need to go out of their way to ask about them only to express their negativity.
I
always laugh at those who tell me my tattoos are going to look ugly when I get
older and my skin starts to wrinkle. I personally think I will look like a bad
ass, and if my wrinkled tattoos are my biggest problem, I'll be doing just
fine.
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