InkSpired Magazine Issue No. 39 | Page 16

piercing business in the country (possibly the world). It was an incredibly esoteric activity; most people had never heard of a piercing other than the ear, or possibly the nostril. Body piercing was simply not on the map. These little stories usually help to provide some perspective: • Piercing was so misunderstood that my former gynecologist broke patient confidentiality (and the law) to tell my parents that I’d had my nipples pierced—even though I was legally an adult. They thought I might need to be institutionalized for harming myself! conversation a few weeks later in which I commented, “The piercings are going pretty well, but it sure is hard to get the jewelry in.” He came back down to L.A. to show me the proper grasp for a jewelry insertion, and he also taught me how to bend a nostril screw. There really was no formal apprenticeship, so I’m fortunate to have had some medical information and background, and a decent aptitude for the task. W hat I initially lacked in technique, I think I made up for in passion, reassuring bedside manner, and excellent communication skills. I still maintain that these are among the key traits of any good piercer, along with sound technical skills, and rigorous hygiene protocols. To clarify, body piercing wasn’t a career-path option back then. At the time, there was just the one specialty 14 InkSpiredMagazine.com • In the 1980s, when I first pierced got my tongue pierced, I told everybody that it was an acupuncture stud for weight control. Not a single person ever doubted me, since nobody had heard of a tongue piercing. Yet. • A tattoo artist/Gauntlet client told me that he had to hide his piercings from his boss, as if it were known that he was pierced, he’d be fired from the tattoo shop for being a freak! We (Gauntlet) always tried to rent a booth at the National Tattoo Association conventions, and in my early days there, we wouldn’t even receive the courtesy of a reply to our requests! They thought piercing was perverse, and that it would give tattooing a bad name. You see, piercing and tattooing didn’t always go together the way they do now.