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.

Like Diamanda Galas says…

It’s pretty common to hear “oops” stories about kanji tattoos — “I thought it meant ‘brave warrior’ but in fact it means ‘orange chicken!’” — but tattoo symbology is a rich subject, so I wanted to tell a story about my friend Mike.

That’s him getting tattooed by Joi, and the resultant biohazard symbol tattoo. He got it right before the 2004 Rhode Island SusCon. At a suspension convention, controlling cross contamination is extremely important and far from easy. I’ll let Mike tell how people responded to his tattoo in his own words:

I went back to my room and checked my e-mail. The friend to whom I’d sent pictures [of my tattoo to] had replied. His response was “Ummm…. Isn’t that usually for poz guys?” That was not the response I was looking for!

[Earlier Ron Garza had also] wanted to know if I knew the significance of my new tattoo. I felt myself getting nervous. He told me that among gay men, it’s an indication that one is HIV positive. At first, I thought he was joking. It took me a few minutes to realize that he was serious.

How the hell did all of these people know about the significance of my tattoo when I didn’t? I spent most of that weekend in a panic. Obviously, I was a little freaked out. The last thing I wanted was for people to think that I’m HIV positive when I’m not. As a gay man, that’s a pretty sensitive topic for me.

Oops!

He’d considered a cover-up, but Mike ended up deciding to keep the tattoo as a reminder to himself that he hadn’t done his homework, a mistake he never wanted to repeat. I should mention that Mike also has several gorgeous tattoos by Jon Clue, including a custom Dr. BME logo.

Comments

6 responses to “Like Diamanda Galas says…”

  1. SkyeTrintiy Avatar
    SkyeTrintiy

    Thats a serious opps, pretty brave to fess up to it though. Lessons learned.

  2. scuffy herbert Avatar
    scuffy herbert

    respect for keeping it, and challenging anybody who judges who you are by your tattoos

  3. I wish I were a Dragon... Avatar

    much agreement with #2

    I would like the symbol tattooed on me, I’m not HIV positive nor gay. I just like 28days later 😛

  4. cpB Avatar
    cpB

    Im going to brand this symbol to my chest next week, knowing well what it means for some ppl.

    This symbol means something completely different for me, cos Im not gay nor hiv-pos. For me, it reminds be about my life from 16yo to now(Im 24 now). I learned the “gay/hiv” meaning of it 8-9 months ago, but dont bother what some ppl thinks. I’ve been thinking of branding this for 5 years now, and looks forward to get it done 🙂 Maybe some pics will be posted here.

  5. Vinca Avatar
    Vinca

    I saw a girl in a veg shop in Orgiva who had the chem hazard symbols for Explosive and a few others going down her arm. Beautifully neat and lovely. Can’t remember if it was Toxic, Flammable, Irritant or Corrosive. Could have been all of them.

    Has Mike thought of getting a qualifying legend to cue strangers that his reason is not HIV? Rhinovirus carrier?

    !HUMAN!

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