Jul 23, 2013 | By Tim Stoddart

Recovery Tattoos – Why People Get Them

Recovery

recovery tattoo

Tattoos are more accepted in society now than they ever were before, but people who have them are still considered edgy. Tattoos are personal, and they’re all unique. Some people have a single, small tattoo that they got just because they could. Some turn their bodies into artistic murals. Others have tattoos hidden under their business suits.

When people get a tattoo, it usually means something; they got it for a specific reason. In the recovery community, tattoos that signify sobriety are fairly popular, especially among people who already have other tattoos. A recovery tattoo is like a badge of honor, and it’s a permanent reminder of a horrific battle against addiction. So why do people actually want recovery tattoos?

Remembering What It’s All About

Teena W. of Pennsylvania has several tattoos that she got before she entered recovery for alcoholism. Once she quit drinking, she “wanted to come up with something to signify this milestone.” Teena has two recovery-related tattoos. On her left side, she has words from the Serenity Prayer (which she recites everyday) – “Serenity, Courage, Wisdom.” On the inside of her left ankle, she the Alcoholics Anonymous symbol inside of a heart, because “for AA to work, it has to be embraced with my heart.”

For Teena, tattoos are “symbols of life events and spiritual experiences that have changed me for the better.” The AA tattoo in particular helps her to “remember what the program is all about.” Recovery tattoos for people like Teena are reminders of the positivity of sobriety; they help them remain grateful for the better life they have today because they overcame their addiction. Teena just celebrated her one year anniversary of sobriety in June, and she plans to get a tattoo to commemorate that.

Rising from the Ashes

Jason R. of Colorado has so many tattoos that he’s lost count. The one tattoo he says means the most to him, however, is the tattoo he has on the back of his left shoulder. The tattoo is an elaborate, colorful drawing of a Phoenix with fiery wings. Jason got this tattoo shortly after his thirty-day mark in recovery. A former heroin addict, Jason said, “After I made it a month without dope I was like, ‘Wow, I can actually do this.’ I felt like a new man, and that’s why I got a tattoo of the Phoenix rising from the ashes – because I was rising from the ashes, too.”

Jason, like many others, got his tattoo to remind him of the struggles he went through in his addiction and, most importantly, how he overcame them. For Jason, it’s a symbol of his “strength and determination. It’s a symbol of how hard my life used to be, but how I made it to the other side into recovery.” It’s a reminder of his ability to change the worst things about himself.

The Story Behind the Ink

Everyone with a recovery tattoo has their own story behind its meaning, and they have their own story about their struggle with the disease of addiction. For some people in recovery, getting a tattoo is a way of taking back control of their body and doing something to it that isn’t deadly.

What’s the story behind your recovery tattoos? If you don’t have any tattoos, what have you done to signify your recovery?

5 responses to “Recovery Tattoos – Why People Get Them

  • donitamcguire

    11 years ago

    I have many tattoos but my favorite ones are the word serenity on the inside of my wrist that I got when I had my first year sober and the serenity prayer on my leg because it is always reminds me I can find my serenity through my recovery. I destroyed so many things when I was using and today I PROUDLY show that I am in recovery. I am planning on getting the Phoenix because I felt that I rose from the ashes and became the strong woman I am today

  • Celeste D.

    9 years ago

    My first recovery tattoo is my 7th year of being clean and sober. I get a tattoo for every year of being clean and sober on my left arm. When ever I feel the need to use…I get a tattoo.I love my tattoos

  • My name is Jarred…i am a recovering heroin addict, 6 months sober… Got an ambigram on the inside of my bicep… Reads recovery right side up and addiction upside down…. It serves as a reminder of where I’ve made it out of, and that there is recovery in addiction

  • Mine says Warrior, because I found out in recovery that that’s who I am.

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