A black-and-white photo of a person mid-air in a Superman-style body suspension pose, supported by multiple hooks in their back and legs, smiling joyfully toward the camera. They are suspended horizontally in a large indoor space with high ceilings and visible rigging. A group of onlookers—some seated, some standing—watch with expressions of admiration, amusement, and support. The atmosphere is lively and communal, capturing a moment of shared experience and transformation.
  • One Hook Day

    A few days ago (Aug 25th) the #Leeds Airlines (St. Petersburg, Russia) and Flying Pigs (Tallinn, Estonia) suspension teams grouped up to host a One Hook Day event.  They set up shop in an abandoned warehouse in St. Petersburg, with only one rule; all suspensions can only use one hook.  Now single point suspensions aren’t anything new, but they’re still rare enough that you don’t see them very often.  Part of the reason why they’re not as popular as other suspensions is that they’re incredibly intense suspensions, both physically and mentally.  They’re definitely not something a first time suspendee would be recommended to try, and often it’s veterans who seek them out.

    Now the suspension you’re seeing below is a pair of single point suspensions, but you’ll notice that the hook is off center.  The reason is that this is actually what Arseniy called a “1pt shift-suicide”.  From what I can tell it appears that the two guys suspending are pierced off-center, but by joining hands their weight is shifted enough for everything to balance out.  So not only are these guys participating in an intense suspension, they’re doing it together.  Without the other person, the weight would be off center and could become uncomfortable, but by linking together they’re forging a bond that no other source could even hope to accomplish.  I can’t even begin to describe what it would have been like for the two of them, but knowing how emotionally and physically taxing suspensions can be, it’s safe to assume that this is something they’ll remember for a long time.

    hook

    Keep an eye on the #Leeds Airlines gallery for more photos from One Hook Day.


  • A Cold Black Heart

    Here’s something new from Gabor Zagyvai (IAM: Wyrd).  While it still is in line with his minimalistic style, the geometric designs combined with the dotwork isn’t what we’re normally used to seeing from him.


  • You’d best start believing in ghost stories

    You’re in one.

    This interesting take on Jack Sparrow was done by none other than IAM:Nail from Nail’s Tattoo in Budapest.


  • Would you like a coke with your suspension?

    IAM: Shadowkult prepped for her angel suspension with the B.E.S.T Suspension Team by knocking back a can of pop (or soda depending on what state you’re in).

    Once she was finished she told the team to “Super Size me”, which they obliged by lifting her up to impressive heights.


  • Can I be a mongoose dog?

    I’m going to sing the doom song now!

    IAM: wh0reg4sm loves robots, and Gir is one of her favorites, so thanks to Rachel Garrison from Devotion Ink in Nashua, NH, she’ll have Gir with her forever.

    Doom doom doom, doo doo doom doom.


  • Everybody stop!

    IAM: Morgy lost a contact lens.  Check your immediate area and watch where you step.


  • Self-Harm as Performance Boosting Aid?

    There’s a fascinating article up right now by Matt McGrath, a science reporter for the BBC — Paralympic athletes who harm themselves to perform better — which discusses the effects of injury and pain on sports performance. Apparently this is especially relevant to paralympic athletes because some of the normal feedback systems that their body would have to increase blood pressure and heart rate while competing could be damaged. The practice of self-harm in sports even has a name, “boosting”, and it’s actually banned by by the International Paralympics Committee (IPC) — and has been since 1994, the year BME was founded. It is believed that perhaps a third of all para-athletes have self-harmed to boost performance.

    “There have been times where I would specifically give my leg or my toe a couple of really good electric shocks” says Brad Zdanivsky, a 36-year-old Canadian quadriplegic climber who has experimented with boosting in the gym.

    “That would make my blood pressure jump up and I could do more weights and cycle harder — it is effective.”

    Other athletes overfill their bladder, sometimes by will, or by clamping off their catheter if they wear one. Others sit on a tack, or tightly strap their legs, or twist their scrotum or otherwise do the sort of things that would get you a free membership and jerk-off-fans in BME/HARD. Still others go as far as taking out a hammer and shattering their toe. This interesting because even though they may not be able to feel the broken toe consciously due to being paraplegic, their body still responds to the injury in ways that cause a performance increase — they are inducing what’s medically called “autonomic dysreflexia and can be quite dangerous.

    “I took it a notch further by using an electrical stimulus on my leg, my toe and even my testicles.”

    But boosting comes at a price.

    “You are getting a blood pressure spike that could quite easily blow a vessel behind your eye or cause a stroke in your brain,” says Zdanivsky.

    “It can actually stop your heart. It’s very unpleasant, but the results are hard to deny. The saying is that winners always want the ball, so it doesn’t matter if it’s unpleasant, it gets results.”

    In addition to causing an increase in athletic performance, according to spinal injury researcher Dr. Andrei Krassioukov at UBC, the increase in blood pressure can also have a mood effect. He puts it simply, pointing out that people “feel better with their blood pressure higher”. I’m sure that this — in addition to the endorphin high — relates to the people who cut themselves ritually or therapeutically as featured in BME’s self-harm galleries and stories (whether you think this is illness or valid is a secondary issue — right now I’m only talking about the underlying medical mechanics). Unlike blood doping or steroids, it is virtually impossible to test for “boosting”, and just because it’s banned doesn’t mean it can be stopped.

    Well, I know this was a little removed from body modification proper, but I hope that it still gives some interesting insights into overlapping issues.

    paraharm

    By the way, the background photo above that I’ve used to illustrate this entry is from an earlier ModBlog entry by Rob that’s a very fascinating story — apparently this client came in wanting to get a voluntary scarification that had the appearance of self-harm to avoid military service! Here’s the entry: Self Preservation or Self Harm? Another very interesting tale.


  • Bavikhove Memorial Tattoo

    Here’s a nice scratch-sketch-style tattoo (for lack of a better way of describing it) by Veronique Depuydt of Original Sin in Belgium. The tattoo memorializes the client’s grandfather, who was the town mayor of a West Flemish city called Bavikhove in the 1950s, and that is who is pictured prominently in the tattoo giving a speech. Much of the rest of the tattoo is made up of a street view of the town at the time — the church of course, as you’ll find in all European towns, and also the old town hall, and flax drying between them, which was once the scene in all the fields in West Flemish towns of the past. Behind his grandfather is an old bottle of Bavik beer — the local brewery still exists — and the most famous bar as well (In’t Damberd). The gravestone near the bottom for his brother who has passed away. This tattoo with it’s stark style, devoid of shading and made up of only powerful confident scratches, I think will age absolutely beautifully, and unlike many tattoos, will actually look better and better with age — to say nothing of being stylistically quite unique.

    bavikhove


  • Ladies and gentlemen, freaks of all sizes…

    I absolutely love this portrait of Sanjula Vamana, and I’ve been meaning to share it for some time, taken by one of his favorite photographers, Mandy Dempsey, for a Circus sideshow photo project. Sanjula is a modern master of classic vaudevillian acts (and his wife is a burlesque performer), performing everything from beds of nails to swinging weights from his junk to intense skewering acts that would put the shivers into even experienced play piercers — chainsaws, whips, fire, escapology, knives, sledge hammers, pain proof, blockhead, human pincushion, stomach pump, dart board, and many other “dangerous acts of perilous danger!” Catch his show if you ever have the opportunity, and if you’re interested in booking him, you can reach Sanjula at [email protected]

    sanjulavamana

    Click to see it at full size of course.


  • SkinTunnel Update

    This is just a very quick post to keep you all in the loop about how the second test of the SkinTunnel is going (here it is on day five, and fresh as well). Healing continues to be trouble free with everything going as expected, with excellent stability. Great work by Gabriele at MaxArt in Italy.

    skintunnel-12days