@lpick047 Oh totally Luc (it is Luc, right?). But it's hard to change mindsets here I find. When I told one of my JTEs that my brother has a small tattoo on his back in memory his best friend who died in a car crash, she still insisted that he was probably a bad person.. and this is from one of my fave JTEs. Mindsets are just hard to change here. It's not always a bad thing but there are a few things Japan could update, in my opinion. It'll be interesting to see what it's like in 50 years ^_^
To be fair to Japan, tattoos had a pretty bad rep back home 10-15 years ago too. I guess things in Japan move just a little slower. As for your JTE, that's pretty intense but I would probably get similar reactions from some of them if they knew about mine..
I find it's very "every situation is different", even with this. In my city, even though it's not that small (half a million people), tattoos are definitely frowned upon. I have no tattoos myself but my friends have been kicked out of gyms for having tattoos in places normally hidden by clothes and I have been told that I shouldn't be friends with people with tattoos (even foreigners) because "People with tattoos are not good people". I imagine this is felt even moreso in small communities D:
You are right that smaller towns, especially with little or no international presence will be far more close minded than other places. However, as cultural ambassadors, we can and should tell, at least to people we are close to, that tattoos don't mean the same thing everywhere. If you look at the percentages of people with tattoos in the west, that makes a very large amount of bad people, based solely on an esthetic choice. Or even makes most Maori men bad based on their culture.
You didn't ask me about my tattoo! Haha. My tattoo is only about 6 inches long and an inch tall. I was really worried about showing it in public (skateboarding with my shirt off, etc) when I first came here. But I kinda don't worry anymore. My students love to see it, but only some now. It surprises them usually. None of my teacher know, but If I was asked I wouldn't definitely talk about it. Cool video!
Very nice video guys!!
swift12y 2 months ago
Japan has a history of tattoo, but at some point it became assocated with crime, and to this day that stigma remains.
BRangiwai 3 months ago
Were you tattoo'ed by Ryugen?
IkaiI 7 months ago
@IkaiI Yes I was. He was a really great guy.
lpick047 7 months ago
@lpick047 lol yeah i thought i recognized the style; I'm getting a full back piece done up by him right now
IkaiI 7 months ago
@lpick047 Oh totally Luc (it is Luc, right?). But it's hard to change mindsets here I find. When I told one of my JTEs that my brother has a small tattoo on his back in memory his best friend who died in a car crash, she still insisted that he was probably a bad person.. and this is from one of my fave JTEs. Mindsets are just hard to change here. It's not always a bad thing but there are a few things Japan could update, in my opinion. It'll be interesting to see what it's like in 50 years ^_^
undeadbread 1 year ago
@undeadbread
To be fair to Japan, tattoos had a pretty bad rep back home 10-15 years ago too. I guess things in Japan move just a little slower. As for your JTE, that's pretty intense but I would probably get similar reactions from some of them if they knew about mine..
BTW, yes it's Luc.
lpick047 1 year ago
I find it's very "every situation is different", even with this. In my city, even though it's not that small (half a million people), tattoos are definitely frowned upon. I have no tattoos myself but my friends have been kicked out of gyms for having tattoos in places normally hidden by clothes and I have been told that I shouldn't be friends with people with tattoos (even foreigners) because "People with tattoos are not good people". I imagine this is felt even moreso in small communities D:
undeadbread 1 year ago
@undeadbread
You are right that smaller towns, especially with little or no international presence will be far more close minded than other places. However, as cultural ambassadors, we can and should tell, at least to people we are close to, that tattoos don't mean the same thing everywhere. If you look at the percentages of people with tattoos in the west, that makes a very large amount of bad people, based solely on an esthetic choice. Or even makes most Maori men bad based on their culture.
lpick047 1 year ago
Very nice
RaymondCorrigan 1 year ago
You didn't ask me about my tattoo! Haha. My tattoo is only about 6 inches long and an inch tall. I was really worried about showing it in public (skateboarding with my shirt off, etc) when I first came here. But I kinda don't worry anymore. My students love to see it, but only some now. It surprises them usually. None of my teacher know, but If I was asked I wouldn't definitely talk about it. Cool video!
afithursday 1 year ago
@afithursday Wait, you have a tattoo?
I had no idea.
lpick047 1 year ago
@lpick047 Yeah, I'm also looking to get a matching one with Akimi...tadaima and okaeri. haha
afithursday 11 months ago