Tattoos are the new plague - Norbert Heuser
Norbert Heuser - Improve Your Life!
For a long time tattoos - or "tattoos" in English - had something disreputable about them. Rough necks, sailors, convicts and "wild tribes in the jungle" wore tattoos. In fact, there is hardly a culture that does not use this type of body decoration. Charles Darwin stated back then: "There is not a nation on this planet that does not know this phenomenon."
In Europe, it is the famous ancient murder case in the Alps, that proves it: The mummy of the glacierman, aka "Ötzi". He died about 5300 years ago on a mountain pass between Austria and Italy. His tattoos appear to have been some sort of therapeutic map. Egyptian mummies have tattoos and there are tattooed figurines as grave goods. Indigenous peoples maintain the custom around the world. Apart from mummified bodies, there is little evidence of ancient times, as tattoos live and die with their owners.
The purpose of tattoos is very different. In some cultures, the nobility not only adorned themselves with expensive weapons, equipment, clothing and buildings, but the body also had to be adorned with indelible symbolism. In contrast to the common people with their simple designs, highly paid masters "painted" artistic tattoos. Certain symbols showed descent, rank and origin, and were well-known in initiated circles.
There were and still are mythical tattoos, for example guardian animal spirits for certain families in Tahiti.
But tattoos could also signal belonging to a certain group. Sometimes as an honor for those in the know, but also since ancient times as a stigma for the marginalized, such as thieves, prisoners, or adulterers. Or as a mark of possession of a gentleman. (SS number under the arm, concentration camp prisoners, keeping slaves - or similar to a brand for animals). The meaning of a tattoo oscillates between distinction and "shame", therapeutic application and body decoration.
Ötzi, the man from the glacier, apparently wore therapeutic tattoos. In fact, it has already been established that the body produces more antibodies under tattoos, which can have a positive effect on inflammation, arthritis or degeneration. Tattoos do not simply remain in the epidermis without consequences, but have an impact deep into the tissue.
Today, tattoos are socially acceptable. There is body art for every taste: primitive, amateurish and artistically valuable tattoos. But while in the past you had to resort to a few natural dyes such as soot and ocher, customers today demand artistically sophisticated and correspondingly expensive tattoos and colors that shine intensively and in many shades.
The problem: Most of these modern tattoo colors are toxic. As beautiful as the images on the skin are, whatever dreams, fantasies or decoration they depict, their owners usually do not think about which unhealthy chemicals are being injected under their skin and what effects they have on the body. A study in the medical journal "Contact Dermatitis" shows: Nine out of ten tattoo colors do not even meet the legal requirements. 73 colors were tested, all of which were contaminated with chrome and nickel. Even mercury, arsenic, manganese, cobalt and lead have been found. Green and blue paints contained copper, sometimes above the limit. By the way: many pigments were not designed and tested to be placed under human skin, but developed for car paint or printer cartridges. In addition, some colors contain banned preservatives or nanoparticles , their effect still unresearched. Some colors also decompose in the skin and nobody knows what their decomposition products can do.
Many ingredients are known to be theoretically carcinogenic or trigger allergies. Only a few studies deal with long-term health effects. What happens to the tattoo colors as soon as they get into the middle layer of the skin and are metabolized there has hardly been researched. The tattoo needle injects the color up to three millimeters deep into the skin. Some of the color travels via the lymphatic system to the lymph nodes, where it stains – and possibly poisons – the lymph nodes, important centers of the immune system. Where else the dyes end up in the body and whether they pose a health risk is also unexplored.
Norbert Heuser has dealt extensively with the problem of the new tattoo colors. He explains, informs and gives advice. An explosive interview.
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