What tattoo do you want and where would you put it?
I trace the needle’s hum,
a vibration stitched into yesterday’s skin—
you, standing there, will ask me tomorrow,
“What tattoo do you want?”
and I’ll laugh,
because the ink already blooms
where the collarbone dips,
a raven with eyes like fractured clocks.
Its wings spread wide,
feathers spill over my chest,
tickling the ribs I once broke
falling from a tree
in a summer that never ended.
She walks into the parlor now,
third person slipping through the door,
hair like spilled ink,
and the artist watches her
with a needle poised,
a priest of permanence.
“What tattoo do you want?” he asks her,
and she points to the moon
tucked behind her ear—
a crescent, waxing,
etched where sound once kissed her skull.
You’ll see it later,
when she tilts her head
and whispers secrets
you swore you’d never hear again.
I wanted the ouroboros,
a snake eating its tail,
coiled around my wrist—
past tense curling into future,
a loop where I bite my own end.
You’ll touch it someday,
run your fingers over the scales,
and ask, “Where’d you put it?”
as if the question wasn’t born
in the marrow of my pulse.
It’s there now,
or will be,
or was—
time frays like thread
beneath the buzzing gun.
He stands shirtless in the mirror,
third person gazing at a stranger,
and decides the spine deserves a ladder—
rungs climbing from tailbone to nape,
each step a year he forgot to live.
“What tattoo do you want?”
the reflection mouths,
and he answers with silence,
letting the ink bleed
into the hollows
where vertebrae whisper regrets.
You’ll climb it,
your hands tracing the ascent,
and wonder if he ever reached the top.
I am the canvas,
you are the question,
she is the answer threading through—
a trinity of want stretched taut.
I’ll carve a constellation
across my thigh,
stars birthed in a night
I haven’t slept through yet.
Orion’s belt cinches the muscle,
a hunter stalking futures
where you’ll press your lips
and say, “This is where it belongs.”
Did I choose it?
Will I?
The stars pulse,
and I think they chose me.
You walk barefoot
through a memory I haven’t made,
toes curling against sand,
and decide the ankle needs a wave—
a curl of blue crashing inward,
salt stinging where the skin thins.
“What tattoo do you want?”
I’ll ask you then,
and you’ll smile,
pointing to the tide
that laps at your bones.
It’s there already,
or it will be,
a flood I’ll drown in
when the needle sings.
They gather,
a chorus of strangers,
third person plural painting the air—
one inks a lotus
where the elbow bends,
petals folding into creases
of a life she bent too far.
Another scars their calf
with a phoenix,
ashes smoldering
from a fire they’ll ignite tomorrow.
“What tattoo do you want?”
the wind asks them all,
and they answer in tongues,
their bodies a gallery
of unspoken hymns.
I wanted a word once—
“Eternal”
scrawled across my palm,
lines crisscrossing fate.
You’ll read it,
or you did,
your thumb brushing the ink
until it fades
into the creases
of a hand I’ll forget to unclench.
Where would I put it now?
The question gnaws,
and I think the throat—
a chokehold of letters
vibrating with every breath.
She dances,
third person spinning
in a room I’ll never enter,
and plants a rose
where her hip flares—
thorns pricking the skin
she offered to no one.
You’ll see it,
or you won’t,
when she lifts her shirt
and the petals blush
against a light
that never touched me.
“What tattoo do you want?”
someone asked her once,
and she laughed,
because the rose
was always there,
waiting to bloom.
I will tattoo the void—
a black square
on the small of my back,
an absence swallowing light.
You’ll press your hand there,
feel the nothing,
and ask, “Where’d you put it?”
as if the answer isn’t
the shadow I carry
into every room.
It’s done,
or it will be,
a mark unmaking me
one stitch at a time.
You stand at the edge,
second person teetering,
and choose the forehead—
a spiral spinning inward,
a map to a mind
you’ll lose tomorrow.
“What tattoo do you want?”
I’ll whisper,
and you’ll trace the curve,
saying, “Here,”
as if the skull
wasn’t already
a labyrinth
I couldn’t escape.
He kneels,
third person humbled,
and inks a tree
across his chest—
roots plunging
where the heart beats,
branches clawing
toward a sky he’ll never touch.
“What tattoo do you want?”
the artist asked him,
and he said, “Life,”
as if the word
could grow
beyond the skin
that cages it.
I am,
you will be,
they were—
a tapestry of ink
unraveling across tenses.
I’ll tattoo a clock
on my tongue,
hands ticking
with every word
I’ll never say.
You’ll taste it,
or you did,
and ask, “Where’d you put it?”
as the seconds dissolve
into a mouth
that forgets its own name.
She rises,
third person shedding skin,
and marks her shoulder
with a wing—
one half of a pair
she’ll never complete.
“What tattoo do you want?”
the world demands,
and she flies,
leaving the question
to feather
into dust.
We collide—
I, you, they—
a mosaic of want
and where.
The needle hums,
past stitches present,
future bleeds into now.
What tattoo do I want?
A scream
across my knuckles,
a galaxy
behind my eyes,
a thread
tying me to you
to them
to me again.
Where would I put it?
Everywhere,
nowhere,
always—
the skin
is never enough.

#Poetry #Surrealism #TattooArt #IdentityInInk #TimeAndSkin #BodyCanvas #InkAndSoul #CreativeWriting


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