self harm tattoo
The story
It’s weird to even say this out loud, but I got a tattoo to cover my self-harm scars. And honestly, I’m not sure how I feel about it. The whole idea started off as something empowering, like reclaiming my body, right? You know the line, “Your skin is your story”—some therapist threw that out years ago during one of my low points. It stuck. I thought maybe, just maybe, putting something beautiful over something so painful would help change the narrative. So I chose a design I’d doodled in a journal years ago—something abstract but meaningful, sort of a fractured mandala, each line connecting past and present. The artist was kind and didn't ask too many questions, just looked me in the eye and said, “We’ll make this a transformation piece.” That sounded nice. Better than what it really was: me trying to hide from myself in ink and pain management creams.
Now that it’s been a few weeks, I stare at it and feel conflicted. The tattoo is well done—technically clean, good contrast, smart shading—but the scars are still visible beneath it. Not physically, not if you’re just glancing. But I know they’re there. That skin holds memory like film holds shadows, and even the pigment can’t overwrite the fact that I hurt myself deliberately, over and over, for years. Sometimes I catch my reflection and wonder who I’m trying to fool. Is this ink for healing, or just another form of concealment? It’s a question I keep circling, like a moth around a porchlight. I'm 38 now. Not a kid experimenting with identity. Not a teenager struggling with trauma she couldn’t name. A grown adult who still can't quite figure out what to do with all this leftover pain.
The part I didn’t expect was how other people would respond. Friends said things like “Wow, that’s powerful” or “It’s so meaningful,” like they were in on some secret spiritual moment. I smiled and nodded and said things like “Yeah, it represents growth,” but I never corrected them when they assumed it was just art for art’s sake. One coworker even said, “That’s dope, did it hurt?” and I just laughed and said “Not more than the stuff it’s covering.” He didn’t get it. And maybe I didn’t want him to. The truth is, there's a whole subculture around tattooing over scars, and it's not always about covering things up—sometimes it's about honoring survival. But I’m not sure if I survived something, or if I just stalled it.
I know this might come across as ungrateful or overly cynical, especially since not everyone gets a second chance to rewrite their skin. But what if rewriting isn't enough? What if healing isn't about erasing the past but learning to live with it in broad daylight? Some days I think I did the right thing—turned something painful into something beautiful, like alchemy. Other days, I feel like I’ve just added another mask, one that requires constant touch-ups and explanation. I'm not embarrassed by the scars anymore, but I am tired of what they represent: all those years spent pretending I was fine, when I was really just holding myself together with caffeine and denial.
Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is—if you’re thinking about getting a self-harm tattoo, ask yourself why. Like really, why. Is it closure? Is it expression? Is it shame in disguise? Maybe it’s a mix of all those. I can’t tell you the right answer because I still don’t know mine. All I know is that ink fades slower than memory, and covering something up doesn’t always mean it’s healed. Maybe that’s okay. Maybe healing isn’t linear. But I do wish someone had told me that before I sat down in that studio, gripping the chair like it was gonna save me.

Stories in the same category
Points of view
Hey there, just gotta say, maybe overthinking this a bit? Not everything needs a hidden agenda or deep meaning; It's just a tattoo. You wanted to cover the scars, you did. That’s all. What's important is that you do what makes you feel comfortable in your own skin. But hey, just remember, ink's not therapy, it’s an aesthetic choice. Scars might still haunt you but that's past—don't let ink become another thing to overanalyze. Healing takes time, and sometimes it's just about moving forward instead of hiding shit under new layers. 🤷♂️
I genuinely appreciate the courage it takes to share such a personal experience. It sounds like your journey with tattoos and scars is both complex and deeply introspective. Tattoos can indeed serve as a form of narrative therapy, providing a tangible means to transform one's physical narrative into something more aligned with personal healing. I totally resonate with the idea of your skin holding memories; I've often thought of my own scars as chapters in a book I didn't choose to write.
hey, i totally get where you're coming from, but isn't it possible you're reading too much into it? tattoos are cool, but they're just art on skin, not magic; it doesn't automatically transform your past. i'm curious about the design you chose—what makes it "fractured" and meaningful to you? honestly, scars can tell their own story, and maybe it's okay to let them be visible. 🤔 isn't covering them up kinda like hiding part of your history? it's alright to question it all and sit with those mixed feelings. healing’s not straightforward, and that's perfectly fine.
I get where you're coming from, but maybe you're being a bit harsh on yourself. Tattoos are just one way to express yourself, and they don't have to carry such heavy meaning. I've got a tattoo myself, and not everything needs to be a transformation piece; it's okay if it's just art that resonates with you. You mentioned, "Your skin holds memory like film holds shadows," but sometimes it's fine to just let the ink be a part of your present, not a constant reminder of the past. 🤷♀️ Scars do tell a story, but adding a tattoo doesn't erase that—it adds a new chapter. Healing is about taking things one step at a time, and it sounds like you're doing just that.
honestly, you're overthinking it. tattoos are just ink on skin, not some kind of magic fix for past issues. i get wanting to cover scars, who wouldn't? but expecting a tattoo to change how you feel is kinda unrealistic. if anything, it’s just another way to decorate your history. i got tats that mean nothing deep, and that's okay. maybe just chill with the heavy meaning and let it be what it is. healing takes more than ink can give; you're the one who makes the change, not a tattoo. 🤨