Homo sarcasmus - a new species of blog from Heath L. Buckmaster

14 Oct, 2008

The Body is a Temple – With Fabulous Drapes

Posted by: heath In: Art| Heath

Many years ago I got my first tattoo. It took me almost six months before deciding that I was going to do it – I wavered, I vacillated, I see-saw’d. I went back and forth on whether I wanted some type of permanent decoration on my body.

It’s not like a piercing which can easily be removed. My left ear is pierced in two places: the normal spot, and in the cartilage at the top of the ear. The normal spot no longer has anything in it, and unless you’re close up, you can’t tell it’s even pierced.

The one at the top still has a hoop in it, and probably will for a long time. If I remove that one it will be much more noticeable since that one punched a hole through the ear. But still, relatively easy to remove with a simple twist.

Tats, not so much. Unless you want to go through laser surgery, you’re pretty much with them for life. If you are of the Christian persuasion, you’ve probably heard “the body is a temple” – and while that’s interesting, take a look at the multitude of cultures in the world who decorate their bodies. They are defiling them, they are celebrating them. So now that I had decided it was perfectly acceptable to my personal morals to get tat’d, I was still deciding what to get.

I’ve long been interested in Egyptian culture. I find affinity with such an ancient civilization, especially given that many of their beliefs and societal values were the framework for cultures of today (and yet somehow we think we are unique). So when it came to choice, the natural one was that I wanted to have tats that were Egyptian in nature, yet had meaning for me.

I finally decided on the design/characters, and Rachelle and I went to the tat shop (she was getting some work done at the same time).

It was pretty intense…I actually went into mild shock and went into a cold sweat, blood sugar dropped, all that good stuff until they gave me some M&M’s and all was well. Within an hour or so I had my first two tats just under my neckline.

The symbol represents the god Ra (done in Hieratic) – which is the god of creation / sun. You could think of this as the positive force. Well I couldn’t stop at that. If you’re going to decorate your temple, you can’t just put up one curtain, you’ve got to put them up on all the windows.

But I didn’t want to go nuts. So about 6 months later I got my next set of tats, this time on my right calf, and instead of representing the creation force they represent the destructive force. This one represents Set – chaos and destruction. You could think of this as the yang to the yin creating a balance on my body.

I haven’t decided what my next tat will be, but it’s going to happen soon – I can feel it. I’m waiting for the inspiration to hit.

Do you have any tats?

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No Responses to "The Body is a Temple – With Fabulous Drapes"

1 | JMo

October 14th, 2008 at 2:14 pm

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Are you sure that means what you think it means?

2 | heath

October 16th, 2008 at 4:53 pm

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very funny indeed, and a terrible joke to play on someone. good thing i do my own research and thoroughly check things out before injecting ink into my body ;-)

3 | Jon

October 16th, 2008 at 6:01 pm

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I think tattoos can look good on people, but I’ve never been interested in any for myself.

4 | Stef

October 20th, 2008 at 1:44 pm

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My temple reads more like a life story. Every tat happened during some crazy time in my life. Everything the symbol for the artist formally known as Prince to my ex’s, yes ex’s shortened name on my ankle AFTER she dumped my ass! Unfortunately I wasn’t methodical enough to logically think out my tats. That being said, I too am getting the tat itch again. With a little thought (and money) I hope to find some inspiration for my temple.



  • Beth: Don't forget all the craziness with the governor having the affair with the woman in South America... South Carolina does have a very few nice bits,
  • heath: Oh Tommy...your comments mirror those of the Dawg as well. They thought Lee's voice was too big for the song. I don't think it was too big, but I can
  • Tommy Marx: Gotta disagree with you on this one sweetie. Yes, Crystal and Siobhan were definitely the best of the women, and while I didn't like the song he sang,

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