Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
What Do They Expect.......?
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/ma gazine- 2921152 6
Cover themselves in the daubings of a 10 year old and wonder why they don't get the job! Please!
Cover themselves in the daubings of a 10 year old and wonder why they don't get the job! Please!
Answers
I'm with TTT here. I don't expect what I am going to say to be popular but I am going to go ahead anyway ! These tattoos just look childish. When I was a boy in the 50's and early 60's, we used to buy packs of bubble gum with transfers in them, in the way home from school. You licked these paper transfers and then stuck them on your arm. But as soon as you got home, Mum would...
06:56 Tue 23rd Sep 2014
New Judge, this is why both my daughter and myself have our tattoos where they can't be seen by people we are not undressed in front of. We chose to have them because WE like them.
Tambo, dole claimants couldn't afford tattoos unless they are working a fiddle, they cost an absolute fortune for decent ones.
Tambo, dole claimants couldn't afford tattoos unless they are working a fiddle, they cost an absolute fortune for decent ones.
A couple of years ago a canadian friend stayed with us for a couple of days. We tooj hinm for lunch at a local(ish) resaurant and he was scandalised to observe that the waitress had a small tattoo on one of her ankles. I don't know whether he thought she was a prostitute or not but she was in fact a prostitute when she wasn't waitressing. Interesting that people who defend the wearing of tattoos can be offended by the slightest implication that there is a link between them and prostitutes. There always has been since I was a kid 60 years ago. In fact the prostitute in question was a very nice person, there are a lot worse in the world, many of them wearing tattoos (and many not).
There is much talk of Ankle adornments (not just tattoos) and their associations with prostitution, and like anything history has many versions and presumptions.
These words are lifted from another forum, but I think it says a lot of what I feel.
//Once again, this is an urban legend and a myth with little to no truth to it. This turns up frequently with some nasty judgments that says more about the person making the judgment than it does about the person the judgement is directed towards.
The origins of this urban legend are very nasty and ugly. It comes from a time when showing and bare skin, even the bare flesh of an ankle was considered wanton and sinful and obscene: and because in many hot weather and tropical climates and/or primitive societies anklets are worn by almost everyone, this was further proof that good Christian women should not expose their ankles or any other flesh nor should "good women" wear jewellery to adorn the naked ankle. It was a way for these women to make themselves feel superior to these people who wore not just ankle jewellery, but all other jewellery on bare skin. Because at one time naked ankles were considered obscene should parents still ban their children from exposing theirs? Because at one time bare arms were obscene, should today's children wear only long sleeves? That conclusion you have drawn with anklets is just as illogical as these two ridiculous examples.
From a historical standpoint ankle bracelets have ben worn as far back as the stone age. They have adorned the ankles of kings and queens, the ankles of ordinary people, movie stars and and everyone in between. When hem lines are high, ankle bracelets are popular. When shoes are plain, anklets are popular. With today's flip flops and casual footwear, anklets add a bit of colour and sparkle to summer and warm weather dressing.
The truth is women who wore anklets in that era were usually independent, self confident and career oriented. There might be more than just a touch of jealousy in that story. Today anklets are merely an article of personal adornment and there is nothing wrong in any way with personal adornment. Women spend far too much time making negative judgements against each other. So there is nothing wrong with kids wearing ankle bracelets or parents letting their kids express themselves through personal adornment. How about we base our judgements on people by their behaviour and actions and words rather than make snap judgements based on what they wear???
These words are lifted from another forum, but I think it says a lot of what I feel.
//Once again, this is an urban legend and a myth with little to no truth to it. This turns up frequently with some nasty judgments that says more about the person making the judgment than it does about the person the judgement is directed towards.
The origins of this urban legend are very nasty and ugly. It comes from a time when showing and bare skin, even the bare flesh of an ankle was considered wanton and sinful and obscene: and because in many hot weather and tropical climates and/or primitive societies anklets are worn by almost everyone, this was further proof that good Christian women should not expose their ankles or any other flesh nor should "good women" wear jewellery to adorn the naked ankle. It was a way for these women to make themselves feel superior to these people who wore not just ankle jewellery, but all other jewellery on bare skin. Because at one time naked ankles were considered obscene should parents still ban their children from exposing theirs? Because at one time bare arms were obscene, should today's children wear only long sleeves? That conclusion you have drawn with anklets is just as illogical as these two ridiculous examples.
From a historical standpoint ankle bracelets have ben worn as far back as the stone age. They have adorned the ankles of kings and queens, the ankles of ordinary people, movie stars and and everyone in between. When hem lines are high, ankle bracelets are popular. When shoes are plain, anklets are popular. With today's flip flops and casual footwear, anklets add a bit of colour and sparkle to summer and warm weather dressing.
The truth is women who wore anklets in that era were usually independent, self confident and career oriented. There might be more than just a touch of jealousy in that story. Today anklets are merely an article of personal adornment and there is nothing wrong in any way with personal adornment. Women spend far too much time making negative judgements against each other. So there is nothing wrong with kids wearing ankle bracelets or parents letting their kids express themselves through personal adornment. How about we base our judgements on people by their behaviour and actions and words rather than make snap judgements based on what they wear???
mamyalynne. I don't think anyone is saying that all women with ankle tattoos are prostitutes, just that ankle tattoos have a bit of history. I was brought up in the east end (ish) of London in a rough area, people with tattoos were seen as socially undesirable, even there. There were very good reasons for this at the time and some of those reasons probably still apply.