chasity950406
Chasity950406
chasity950406

I think the answer on that is pretty clear in most cases. My male coworker has a sleeve. On casual Friday he will sometimes wear a short sleeve where you can see the work. I am a woman with visible upper back and foot ink work. Nothing racist, racy or inappropriate in content. When I wore a sundress I was asked to put

Well, in gang terms, the tears by your eye mean you’ve killed someone. That disqualifies you from watching my kids.

Bracelet and rings probably wouldn’t bug me, but those are few and far between. When I think of hand tattoos, I’m thinking of the knuckle tattoos.

Face and throat maybe. Back or side of neck, not so much as far as I’m concerned. With hands, i’ve seen alot of people go with something that looks like a bracelet or ring so that’s not a big deal.

I made sure that all my tattoos are in places easily covered by clothing.

I'm a woman with both arms 75-80% tattooed, with others elsewhere. I expect fully to be judged for having them by hiring managers, and cover them accordingly until I ferret out the company culture later after being hired. I work professional jobs in somewhat conservative office environments since about 10 years. I'm

I work for one of the big banks and thankfully so far I’ve been lucky. I’m not customer facing and no one seems to care. I do mostly keep them covered and always go fully covered for interviews because, although their is no policy against it, I wouldn’t want someone’s personal feelings about tattoos to influence their

Face tattoos, easiest way to tell that someone has questionable judgement or poor decision making abilities. There are exceptions to this rule, but genuinely few and far between.

Most of those who complete a college degree also have a high school diploma. In fact, I don’t think you can start college without a high school diploma, am I correct?

#1 place to work with tattoos:

I’m surprised that the percent of tattooed folks in retail is only 14%; anecdotes are not data, but especially in the last five years or so, the percentage of people in my store with tattoos has jumped substantially; I’d estimate that on average at least a third of the staff, including managers, has at least one.

I am somewhat surprised by the figures, I work in tech and there are loads of people with visible tats.

Though to be fair, in a McDonald’s play place with 50 other adults there, they aren’t in any way ‘left without adult supervision’.

As someone who works in a college and lives in a town that has 50,000+ students descend on it for 8 months a year, it goes very badly. They have zero idea how to be self sufficient and they have a false sense of security/hugely gullible.

An 8-year-old by themselves is at worst borderline. But a 2-year-old is still at the age where they choke on things and are generally acting like they have a death wish, so they should not be left without adult supervision and I would be OK with a law stating that.

Im not in the business of telling people how they should and should not raise the miniature versions of themselves.. However I do wonder what they think will happen when that child goes off to college and experiences the unfiltered world they were shielded from for 18+ years.

And the funny part is, statistically, we were much, much less safe in the 80s.

Exactly!! The world has definitely changed since I was a kid and that wasn’t even long ago. My parents would be locked up for life nowadays.

In this day when 6 year olds have the iPhone 6 and can reach friends and family in seconds, it’s illegal to let them play in their own front yard. Yet in the 80's I’d say “Going to my friend’s house” and be anywhere I wanted without my parent’s knowledge.