Tattoo Designs by Janice Grimes


Do tattoos on your wrist hurt? – The Body Has Ways of Warning You of Danger


All tattoos tend to create a bit of discomfort for most people, no matter where they are located. People who are looking into getting a tattoo on their wrist usually ask; Do tattoos on your wrist hurt? For many people, this is a very sensitive area. Not only is it more sensitive because the skin has less muscle and fat beneath it, but this is also a more protected part of the body.


The back of the arm, outer thigh, bottom of the foot, and palm of the hand are tougher parts of the body, due to constant contact with their environment. Have you ever noticed that brushing up against something rough with the outside of your arm hurts less than taking a coarse object and rubbing it on the inside of your arm? The palms of your hands and bottoms of your feet are layered with thick muscle, but the top portion is thin skin covering a fine layer of muscle and is close to the bones.


Your wrist is also an area where quite a few veins are located close to the surface. This is a portion of your arm that is positioned closer to your body for a reason. A person is liable to bleed to death if these veins are damaged, which means the body is going to be quicker about sending out warning signals of pain in this location.


Not only are the signals going to be received by the brain faster, but they are also going to be stronger signals than those received by the brain when you get a small cut on your shoulder. A wound to the shoulder isn’t going to expose any vital organs or major arteries that will cause you to bleed to death. So, do tattoos on your wrist hurt? Yes, and for good reason.


What are the risks of getting a tattoo? – Thinking Before You Act


When asking; what are the risks of getting a tattoo, there are a number of considerations. There can be health risks, social acceptance factors, employment issues and plain old remorse from poor choices in artwork and theme.


As for the health risks there are concerns of blood born pathogens such as HIV, Hepatitis, infectious disease, infection of the wound, tetanus from bad needles, the rise of blood pressure due to pain, diabetics may have trouble healing, hemophiliacs would have problems clotting and so on.


A tattoo is ultimately the creation of a wound, usually with a piece of metal. As with all wounds, there are risks of infection and transfer of disease. These risks are minimized with sterilization techniques, but the techniques are only as good as the people who employ them and the diligence with which they go about doing so.


Other risks outside the immediate medical concerns are more about how others react to the tattoo. Friends, family, clergy, school faculty, employers, perspective customers and the various day to day people encountered during every day activities.


The reactions of some people may not even be noticed whereas the reactions of others may be seriously detrimental to the emotional state of the person with the tattoo. Much of it depends upon how the tattoo is perceived and what the viewing public feels it means, symbolizes or represents experience or association with.


In the not too distant past, tattoos were associated with prison life and other ‘undesirable’ lifestyles. These days, tattoos have been glorified in film and music to a degree that they have become much more popular with the mainstream public. Some judgment still exists.


There are more than a few employers who still refuse to give work to people who openly display tattoos, no matter how benign the artwork may be. The Hebrew religion denounces tattoos and will not allow a person to be buried in a Jewish cemetery with tattoos other than those forcibly placed upon Jewish prisoners in the holocaust.


Ultimately, what are the risks of getting a tattoo? All of the above and more. Still, they are only risks which should be considered, not guaranteed consequences.