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Originally Posted by WingsToDiscovery
I have a question about a tattoo, but it's unrelated to the OP. I just didn't want to make a new thread.
So as far as right now goes, I have zero tattoos. I'd never really wanted that one THAT badly, and especially when I toyed around with the idea of going to Japan, I kind of actually used some of that as a justification for not getting one. Everyone knows about the stigma of having tattoos in Japan (although I've never seen the same answer twice), but every time I've seen an inquiry about tattoos in Japan,it's always after the OP already has a tattoo and is concerned about how it will affect them in Japan.
My case is a bit different though, since I don't actually have a tattoo yet. The reason why I brought the topic up now, however, is because I've been considering getting one while I'm on vacation in the US. The tattoo concept itself is a tribute piece to one of my best friends who had an untimely death last year, and the design itself pulls inspiration from one of his own tattoos (This is really just saying that it's not something stupid like a kanji).
But I'm afraid that people may not care about what the tattoo represents but instead simply that it's a tattoo. It's popular in western culture to get things like tattoos, but I'm afraid Japanese society may not be so accommodating to my cultural choice.
So if you don't have a tattoo now, would you consider getting one anyway even if you were planning on living in Japan? If you already do have one and are in Japan, do you regret having it and would have refrained from getting it if you knew you were going to be living in Japan?
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My point of view, I imagine, wouldn't differ much from yours since we're in similar situations. But here it goes anyways,
Tattoos on foreigners are perceived very differently by the vast majority of the population than tattoos on Japanese people, and even these days tattoos on Japanese people, if clearly artistic, are perceived as acceptable by a growing, yet small, part of society.
I don't have a tattoo either, but honestly when students ask me if I have one, and I say no, I swear I catch some disappointment in their eyes!
I think part of meeting a foreigner in Japan is seeing something different, and the more different the more of an experience it is.
It does set you apart though, and if fully integrating into society is your goal, it's the wrong direction.
But if being unique and standing out is part of your role that you capitalize on, it might help your cause.
Regarding public baths and onsen, how often do you really go?
And these days more of these places turn a blind eye to the "fashion" tattoo compared to the yakuza tattoo.