Month: April 2021

We Love Tattoos! (Part 2: Josh’s journey from simple and impactful to complicated and colorful)

We Love Tattoos! (Part 2: Josh’s journey from simple and impactful to complicated and colorful)

Pikapika
Not one of Josh’s tattoos, but still pretty funny. Maybe a future plan…

Welcome back to our We Love Tattoos series! Check out the link to see part one, and to see part 3 and 4 in the future (hiiii future!). In this part, if you couldn’t tell from the (sub)title, Josh is going to talk about his tattoos!

Tattoo #1: Hammer (August 2017)

Artist: Michela Dilernia, currently at My Little Needle Tattoos in Plymouth, MI

We both really love impact: showing up, making things better. We tend to get bored if nothing’s happening and there’s nothing for us to do.

In the past, we’ve done what are called “Core Values Exercises” to help people and teams figure out how to describe themselves in a few words that represent their core defining characteristics. “Impact” is one of Josh’s, and the symbol for him for that is a big ol’ hammer, so…that was his first tattoo.

With blurry picture of Josh’s happy kid.

I loved the whole experience, it didn’t hurt too bad, and I loved how it turned out. Big patches of black, straight lines, my artist was great. Some touch-up inside the black was needed after the first session, but I loved it.

Tattoos #2 and #3: Armband and Sans (October 2020)

Artist: Shaun Friday, at Ministry Ink in Lansing, MI

My first plan was to only have black and grey tattoos because I really like the look of old tattoos – black tattoos settle almost immediately into a less intense black, and they look more like an intrinsic part of a person’s body. “Venerable” is also a core value…

I really liked armbands (I blame the hot arms of CS:GO players), and I knew I wanted one. I also very much wanted a tattoo of Sans from the game Undertale. Sans, as it turns out, is a real nice guy – unless you push him too far, and then he surprisingly and skillfully murders you to death.

Taking an armband tattoo break: check out that band (and my shaved arm!)

Here are the completed tattoos: Sans winking, the armband from the inside, which has a geometric slanted opening. Also, us smiling goofily, and Laine with her Harley Quinn hair!

I decided to get both of these tattoos at the same time because I had a backlog of tattoos that I wanted, and since they were both small, Shaun was cool with doing both in one sitting.

Tattoo #5 (yes, we know it skips numbers, more on that in a minute!): V is for Vendetta (January 2021)

Artist: Adam at Psychotic Ink in Clearwater Beach, FL

We went to Florida and found a tattoo shop near the beach, and decided to roll the dice and see how it went. Laine got a beautiful tattoo, and I decided to get a tattoo on one of my favorite ideas (and movies). It might be my most beautiful tattoo, and it was also the most colorful up to that point. Thus completed my swap to “whoa, colorful tattoos are amazing.”

Ideas are Bulletproof

Tattoo #6: Sans – Bad Time (January 2021)

Artist: Shaun Friday again!

Sans on the wrist was really cool, happy, and represented me well – but I really liked the idea of Bad Time Sans, which is the aforementioned “skillfully murdering you to death” Sans (here’s a link to a playthrough in the game after you’ve chosen to play as a super awful person, several times in a row – lots of Undertale spoilers there). Both iterations of Sans really reflect how I see myself, so, I got this Sans tattoo as well. I had to think harder than the previous tattoos about where I wanted it, but ultimately I’m really glad I chose this position (which is on my chest). It shows up when my shirt moves sometimes, and I’m really happy with that.

(This is what a tattoo looks like fresh: pretty inflamed, a little swollen. It heals up nicely later.)

Tattoos: Mechs!

I really really love Battletech. So much. I played as a kid, and I loved so much about it. I now have 3 tattoos of the various mechs from Battletech.

Tattoo #4: Battlemaster (December 2020)

I love the Battlemaster (“venerable” again) the most, and I got this as a half blueprint/half full color:

Artist: Kayla Grosso, also at Ministry Ink in Lansing, MI (this tattoo made it onto Kayla’s Instagram page!)

Tattoo #7: Atlas (February and March 2021)

Then, I wanted an Atlas, and decided (after much debate with the artist) that my ribs was a good place for it, because…lots of free real estate. The ribs are widely considered to be the MOST painful place to get a tattoo, and while we talked about other places, less painful places, I really wanted this to be a tattoo large enough to have the right amount of details. More room for more detail means a better looking tattoo.

Artist: Adam Crane, also at Ministry Ink (and the owner!) in Lansing, MI

This is Atlas, as artwork!

One of the cool things about an artist is they can take original art and turn it into an awesome tattoo, blending elements that you love to make something altogether original. They also fit it to your body, which means moving pieces around, changing orientation, and making sure it wraps the body properly.

This was how Atlas looked at the end of sitting #1.

This was a super painful tattoo. The first session, lines, shading, and some color, and I was really hurting. I have a pretty good pain tolerance, and in fact Adam told me that I might have been his best rib tattoo client ever because I dealt with it so well – but this hurt worse than any physical hurt I remember, including breaking a leg. I love Bactine: the fancy pain-numbing stuff that tattoo artists can put on tattoos, it helps so much, at least temporarily.

The second session was fill-in color, and really illustrated one of the cool things about tattoos: they are a million different pieces of art, continually being added to while the artist works. Line work is great. Greys and shading are great. Color is great. As a human canvas, we get to see it all done.

Well…we get to see it all done assuming you can see the tattoo while it’s being done. We’ve both found that watching the tattoo being done helps with pain tolerance, because it’s fascinating and distracting and easier to mentally prep for it to hurt in a particular place. We learned with Bad Time Sans that not being able to see makes it hurt a lot worse, so for the rib tattoo we tried putting up/holding a mirror – but it hurt so much that Josh actually couldn’t watch for a while.

That day I learned, doing anything to distract yourself, including counting, breathing exercises, and distracting myself with different textures, all measurably help with the pain. More pro tips on that when we do that post!

All done! After the second session.

I do plan to get more added to this tattoo, like a background, but…recovery first.

Soundwave Tattoos - Home | Facebook

Tattoo #8: Headhunter (March 2021)

Artist: Shaun Friday, one more time!

When I was a kid, I had fun making custom mechs in the Battletech game. One of my favorites was a modified Axman with a heavier body (60 tons), carrying a mace with triple strength myomer. It carried some lasers too, for range and to warm up the myomers, but basically it was a close-in melee brawler. I called it the Headhunter and with the right pilot it could smash the top off of a mech a whole weight class above it.

After Laine’s great tattoo of Shaun’s original art (spoiler alert!), I had the idea to have Shawn draw up this mech in his style, and the result is awesome:

Up Next?

I have no idea what my next tattoo will be. I have a good mech theme going, and I’m considering wrapping the Atlas scene around my torso (ow), but for now, my plan is to recover and think deep thoughts about life, what parts of my soul I want to share with the world, and what feelings I may need to process next.

The Case for Christian Libertarianism and Anarchy

The Case for Christian Libertarianism and Anarchy

We first had the idea for this blog a while ago, when Laine was trying to find the right words to describe her political leanings. Libertarian isn’t quite right. Anarchist is more accurate, but Anarchy as a whole seems like…a description of the problem more than a fully fleshed out societal plan. The fact is, what we both believe takes pieces from Libertarianism and Anarchy – but mostly, it coincides with the core tenet of Christianity. Since we first thought of doing this blog, we’ve learned thanks to our Libertarian community that actually…the overlap of Christians and Anarchists (and presumably Libertarians) is a common pattern.

Some Definitions, because Context

Libertarianism (see also the other posts we’ve written on the topic):

Libertarianism (from French: libertaire, “libertarian”; from Latin: libertas, “freedom”) is a political philosophy and movement that upholds liberty as a core principle. Libertarians seek to maximize autonomy and political freedom, emphasizing free association, freedom of choice, individualism and voluntary association. (Wikipedia)

Libertarians also typically believe that the only time force against another person is warranted is if that person is violating the Non-Aggression Principle (or the “NAP”).

The non-aggression principle (NAP), also called the non-aggression axiom, is a concept in which “aggression”, defined as initiating or threatening any forceful interference with either an individual or their property, is inherently wrong.

Anarchy:

Anarchy is the state of a society being freely constituted without authorities or a governing body. It may also refer to a society or group of people that entirely rejects a set hierarchy. (Wikipedia)

The Core Tenet of Christianity

We’ve talked about The Jesus Cheat before, but the very very condensed arc of the Bible, Christianity’s origin story if you will, goes something like:

  1. God gave people a lot of rules they had to follow in order to be in a relationship with him…
  2. …they were terrible at it.
  3. God got pissed, because is it really that hard to keep your commitments, you guys?
  4. He tried again, with different people…
  5. …they were also terrible at it.
  6. Eventually, he sent Jesus, who was both 100% human and also 100% God (Yeah, that math tho…) to live as a person, among people, and be a sort of…proxy for all of the ways that people screw up and are broken and hide from each other and also God. Jesus was a proxy for this pain (or, if you will, sin) for all people, past present and future, because…God magic, basically? (there’s a reason we very lovingly call it a cheat…)
  7. Jesus died under the weight of all of that pain, including the worst pain of all which is complete separation from God. This served to allow God to (we think) freely give remaining in relationship with people even if they screwed up over and over and over. It also broke, or forgave, any obligation that people had to God and made the relationship purely choice-based.

Basically, God saved people from their own broken, and found a way to stay by pre-forgiving them forever. We get this pre-forgiveness and utter acceptance from God as long as we do one thing (instead of a long list of things) – and that one thing is, depending on who you ask, believing in the Jesus Cheat or just…trying to have a relationship with God – making the relationship “purely choice-based.” Said differently, the only requirement to be fully accepted by God is to choose to be in a relationship with him. Human choice was the only checkbox that God maintained, which would indicate that human choice matters a lot. To God.

…there are nuances of course, and several lifetimes of study and understanding possible regarding Christianity. Maybe in a month or a year or a decade, we’ll be like, no, that was dumb, it’s actually this other thing. But for now, that’s the best understanding we’ve got, and it’s done a LOT to inform our political beliefs.

Libertarianism and Anarchy and Christianity, oh my!

So, we’ve got…

  • Libertarianism: people deserve to be free
  • Anarchy: no human system is the boss of me
  • Christianity: God is the only boss of me, and he appears to have actively preserved my right to choose

As you can see, there’s overlap there… God thinks we deserve to be free to choose, and if we choose a relationship with him, that relationship trumps all other relationships such that we are not subject to the “rule” of…anyone. That means that people do not deserve, or even need, to be controlled, because God’s got this even if sometimes people do awful things. As Josh is fond of saying, karma always comes. If God doesn’t want to control us, then people definitely don’t get to.

Radical Choice-ist

If God worked that hard to preserve human choice, then…so should we. If we don’t try to control other people, and we don’t accept that we deserve to be controlled, then all of our interactions become rife with choice and personal freedom. As long as we aren’t violating the NAP, we have the inherent right to live our lives as we see fit.

LP and Chill: It’ll Be Just Fine – the Short Version

LP and Chill: It’ll Be Just Fine – the Short Version

Sometimes we see a pattern, and we try to explain it, and…we end up looking like this crazy conspiracy theory guy. Not because what we’re saying is far-fetched, more because it’s so interconnected and there are so many examples and we care about it so so much that it’s hard to be clear about the points we’re trying to make. More than once, this has pointed us at toward the full explanation of the pattern ending up a longer-form piece of content – like a talk, or “maybe some day a book,” or…we don’t really know. Just..some stuff is too long or too complex for a blog, despite that being where we usually start when we want to talk about something outside of the context of “work stuff.”

Sometimes, though, we find that we can do a summary, or a short(er?) version, of the explanation of the pattern. We’ve been seeing, and writing, more about politics lately, especially the Libertarian Party (LP), because the crazy of the world has led us both to open our eyes about it. And…there are reasons that we think politics might be part of the overall answer, and that is the pattern we want to talk about.

There is a Culture War

Are you happy with the United States political system? This question is not, are you happy in relation to what came before, or are you happy ish, but are you really, truly happy about the people in charge of making, enforcing, and talking about the policies that affect your personal freedoms every day?

If you’re not happy with it, do you feel comfortable talking about that? Do you think that your friends and loved ones and coworkers and various other tribes will still accept you if you’re honest about the problems you see and how those problems make you sad, or hopeless, or angry? Because…we aren’t happy with the current system. And our comfort with talking about that varies, but…most of the people Laine at least interacts with on a daily basis just seem really happy that Not Trump is president.

The fact that the current state is depressing, and frustrating, and that we can’t talk about that without alienating ourselves, is a sign of a large-scale, many-factioned culture war. The Corpo State/Cathedral, the Woke, the Karens, the Conservative Christians, the Antifa’ers, the BLM’ers, the Thin Blue Liners… this isn’t even all of the factions, but all of these groups seem to exist primarily to tell people that saying or feeling something that the group doesn’t approve of makes that person a terrible human being who deserves to be dehumanized and disregarded.

[The factions] seem to exist primarily to tell people that saying or feeling something the group doesn’t approve of makes that person a terrible human being who deserves to be dehumanized and disregarded.

COVID has been a mess, and has added the Masker, Vaxxer, Anti-Vaxxer, Lockdowner, and Anti-Lockdowner factions. What is irrefutable is that the lockdowns that were supposed to keep us all safe have caused mental health crises, increased suicides, increased incidences of abuse, and business closures, with no end in sight because we have no coherent metrics for when it will be “safe enough” to go back, or forward, to some semblance of normal.

It Sucks

The culture war, that is. It sucks to be hopeless, and to be too afraid to talk about it. And with that many factions constantly sniping at each other, sometimes the hopelessness and the fear seem…legit.

It Leads to Actual Life-Threatening Conflict/War

In addition to leading people to live in fear, this culture war leads to actual war, if we use the “life-threatening conflict” definition of war. The government is willing to use force and violence to enforce whatever it thinks is important, mostly in the form of the police, although sometimes with agencies like the ATF. There are historical events, like Waco, and also current events, like insurrection and riots in Minnesota and on the west coast just this week. People think that the police are the bad guys for all the damage they do, and while an argument could be made that they’re choosing to enforce laws that are non-sensical and damaging, it definitely seems true that they’ve been handed an impossible task that will see them also getting hurt in the process.

People think that police are the bad guys for all the damage they do…but it seems true that they’ve been handed an impossible task that will see them also getting hurt in the process.

Some People Love the Culture War…

On the other hand, this culture war is great for some people. It distracts most of the American public from noticing that their freedoms are being slowly leeched away in the name of “safety.” It also helps people in positions of authority further cement those positions because they can position themselves as the saviors of humanity – or, they can use fear and intimidation to get compliance if not support.

The culture war also gives the people who are happily part of those factions a way to convince themselves that they’re right – they can simply be louder, and look around to see the people who are nodding in agreement, and then temporarily feel safety in numbers. The people nodding in agreement, even if they aren’t quite sure, can also find some feeling of safety because they aren’t currently being rejected by the people around them.

…because Control and “Safety”

All of these reasons to love the culture war are about control, and “safety.” People in positions of authority are trying to control everyone else into either being safe or making them feel safe, if they get some personal value out of being “in charge.” The loudest members of the factions are trying to control the people around them into making them feel like their opinions are right, and that those opinions will keep that group safe even if everyone else is screwed. And the people nodding in agreement are hiding – trying to control the people around them into not rejecting them, or kicking them out of the tribe.

But…we know, because of a lot of science, that control doesn’t work. Not at all, and definitely not long term. The problem is that people are terrified of the potential consequences of both not controlling and not being controlled.

But…You Have a Choice

The thing is…you don’t have to control other people. And you don’t have to accept being controlled. You have a choice. It may not be an easy choice, and it may lead to some of your relationships altering, or ending. But actually, you can just…process the fear of the potential consequences without changing anything. Processing the fear allows you to see reality more clearly, and to see that trying to control other people is never okay – which means that it isn’t okay for someone to try to control you, either.

You can just choose to process the fear instead of grabbing for control.

If, once you process your fear, you want to change something, then…comes the hard part. Learning how to give up control isn’t easy, and it’s scary, and it requires trust in something outside of yourself.

People

You actually can have some amount of faith in people, or in humanity as a whole. People do wonderful, beautiful things, and their capacity for good is often staggering. We said at the beginning on this post, “there are reasons that we think politics might be part of the overall answer, and that is the pattern we want to talk about.” The Libertarian party has seen an upswing this past year, for…reasons that may at this point be kind of obvious. And it’s not perfect, and actually we’re both more Anarchist than Libertarian by the strictest definition – but the Libertarian party has several voices who are saying, loudly and clearly and well, that personal freedom matters. That people matter. More than the government, more than rules, more than checkboxes and false safety. And they’re building communities and actively trying to make change to reflect that people matter at all levels.

God

…but faith in people alone isn’t enough. Both Josh and Laine genuinely have no idea how people learn to give up control without faith in something outside of themselves and outside of other people. We can very clearly see that all of this weirdness, and all of this unrest, and even the culture war itself, is God doin’ stuff. We have no idea what he’s doing, but if he’s doing stuff, he has a plan, and if he has a plan, it’s going to be awesome

There are no end states in life, which means that while things can never be completely safe, they also can never be completely broken and hopeless. And while the culture war sucks, it’s actually…okay. It’s growing pains, toward the next thing.

We Love Tattoos! (Part 1! Tattoos are Super Cool!)

We Love Tattoos! (Part 1! Tattoos are Super Cool!)

It’s time to start a new series, apparently! We both really love tattoos. Laine has been getting them off and on since she was 14, and while Josh only started a few years ago, but regardless of number of tattoos or time spent getting them, it’s one of the best ways to get either or both of us babbling about the things we know and love about them. We plan to write about our favorite of our tattoos, and our recommendations for getting a tattoo (PRO TIPS! NUMBER FIVE WILL BLOW YOUR MIND!!!!!….actually not, just what we’ve learned as we’ve gone along).

So…the series as we have it roughly sketched out right now will go something like this:

1. Tattoos are super cool, here’s what we know about how they work and some of our fav artists (this post!)
2. The stories behind Laine’s tattoos
3. The stories behind Josh’s tattoos
4. Tattoo pro tips

Why Tattoos?

As you know, we love souls and the power they have, and we hate hiding them.

We believe everyone has a unique awesome to them, a shard of some great holy essence, a supernatural Meaning. So…hiding that shit is stupid. But not hiding it is kind of scary, for the reasons that we’ve talked about before and will continue to talk about that basically boil down to being afraid of being alone – well and truly alone – because of not hiding your soul well enough.

Tattoos have an interesting sort of cost/benefit when it comes to souls. They require physical pain, and sometimes emotional pain, to design them and to get them, and then they themselves serve as a monument to that pain. You would think that physical and emotional pain could not possibly be beautiful, and that it wouldn’t be something a person would want a permanent reminder of – but the pain existed regardless of it can be seen, and tattoos are beautiful. As a result, we’ve found that tattoos are a great way to show your soul, and intermingle your soul and what it loves and knows and means with a super talented artist. The mingle results in something beautiful and permanent and uniquely you, that goes where you go and helps tell your story.

How Tattoos Work

Tattoos are permanent body art that comes to be via stabbing someone repeatedly with a motorized cluster of tiny needles with ink coating them.  (Josh: I didn’t know this, I thought the ink flowed from inside the needles. This week I learned.) This article explains it well, although its advice for aftercare is old. Basically, skin has multiple layers and is a lot thicker than it seems, and tattoos deposit ink into the dermis/middle layer. The machine that does the tattooing is shaped a bit like a gun, but most tattoo artists prefer to call it what it is – a “machine.”

The palette of inks available is staggering, and you can get a tattoo in any of those colors that exist or any color that your artist mixes FROM those existing colors. The outline of tattoos is typically done in black, although not always, and the whole tattoo can be black and white and gray, or it can be all of those plus full color. Tattoos last a long time, but because you’re an alive person, and your skin is also alive, tattoos tend to fade and blur over long periods of time. There are a few factors that influence how fast this happens, or even if it happens in a way that’s noticeable. We’ll talk about those later, in the pro tips post!

You can see some interesting slow-mo video of how tattooing works here:

Do Tattoos Hurt?

Ribs: free real estate

…yes. Tattoos hurt. Sometimes they hurt a lot, because…you’re literally being stabbed, thousands of times.  How much they hurt varies depending on the person, and on the location of the tattoo. For us, it’s ranged from feeling like a light scratch to feeling like being cut open. In the later posts where we talk about our tattoos, you’ll learn that Josh has a massive rib tattoo – and I (Josh) can say clearly that ribs are not a fun place to get tattooed. But they are huge real estate, and sometimes that matters because bigger areas to tattoo mean…well, that you can have a bigger tattoo. And bigger tattoos mean that you have more space, or canvas, for beautiful detail and color and shading. Big tattoos can be really pretty, and that might mean getting a tattoo in a painful place.

In our experience, we both have a high pain tolerance (per our favorite tattoo artists, anyway!), so… we aren’t afraid of pain, especially physical pain. It’s worth it, and at times it can even be quite cathartic.

How Much Do Tattoos Cost?

Tattooing is not prohibitively expensive, although the cost can require some planning. Neither of us are what you’d call artists in any drawn medium, which means that we typically need a tattoo artist to do some design work for us on top of the tattoos themselves. Some artists will charge for this design work, and some assume it’s an included cost of doing business. For the tattoo itself, most artists charge somewhere between $100 and $200 an hour, and tipping is both accepted and welcome in our experience.

As a rough example, a well-done tattoo about the size of your hand could take between 90 minutes and 4 hours, which would translate to somewhere between $150 and $800, plus tip. The bigger the tattoo, the more detailed the tattoo, or the more painful the tattoo, the more sessions it might take to complete – which would mean one trip to the tattoo shop, then time to heal plus time for the artist to be available again (artists can be booked months in advance), then another trip to the tattoo shop…repeat as needed.

But…don’t forget, you get to keep the art forever. And it serves as a reminder to yourself, a memento of your history, a thought that brings you joy, or just something beautiful that you have as a permanent decoration on yourself. If you amortize the cost over your lifetime…they become relatively cheap.

We also tend to build relationships with people who do something as intimate as tattooing us, which means that we spend time and money to obtain something important to us, and we also get to hang out with friends. It’s a great way to spend a few hours and a few hundred bucks.

Favorite Local Artists, and How to Find a Good One

We’ve both had a significant amount of work done by the folks at Ministry Ink. Between us, we’ve had 3 tattoos from Adam Crane, who is also the owner of the shop, 3 tattoos from Kayla Grosso, and 4 tattoos from Shaun Friday.

Laine also got 3 tattoos in 2017/2018, all very different styles, from Trish, who owns My Little Needle Tattoos. We also both got a tattoo from (a different) Adam at Psychotic Ink in Clearwater, FL.

…which brings us to the “how to find a good artist” portion of the blog! There are two ways to find a good artist or shop – 1) recommendations from people you trust, usually people who already have tattoos that are not ugly, and 2) looking at artists’ work online and falling in love with their style. Ministry Ink, and Adam and Kayla in particular, were recommended to Laine by tattooed friends, when she was trying to find someone who would do two custom pieces. Instagram is great to see an overview of an artist’s style, which is why we’ve linked to artists’ Instagram accounts where we can.

You can research what makes a good tattoo/what a good tattoo looks like – Josh learned a lot recently by watching Ink Master, while Laine learned a lot 20+ years ago by scouring tattoo magazines. You should also meet with/consult with your artist before getting a tattoo and find out if you’re comfortable with them, if that matters to you. It matters a lot to both of us, because this person will see you at what could be close to your weakest, and…vulnerability + a jerk with a tattoo machine does not make for the best possible experience.

Next Up…

Part 2! The stories behind either Josh or Laine’s tattoos, depending on which one gets done first!