LovingSylviaPlath's recent talk at the Sylvia Plath Society's online conference inspired me to do something I swear I thought I would never, ever do. And that is to get a tattoo. Any not just any tattoo: but a Sylvia Plath-inspired tattoo. No, I did not get a $15 Eagle to pay homage to one of my favorite short stories. That might have been too predictable.
No, I decided to honor Plath's longer prose, The Bell Jar, and get a tattoo of a turkey neck and turkey gizzards. Buddy, the most complete and fully realized character in the novel, and the one for whom we, as readers, develop the most sympathy and compassion, is a worthy fictional character to immortalize in ink. In addition, I decided to have it captioned "Poems are dust" in Olde English script, because I'm kind of classic like that. The total cost was $401. Not bad. And my doctor said the tetanus I got from it will clear up in a few months.
No, I decided to honor Plath's longer prose, The Bell Jar, and get a tattoo of a turkey neck and turkey gizzards. Buddy, the most complete and fully realized character in the novel, and the one for whom we, as readers, develop the most sympathy and compassion, is a worthy fictional character to immortalize in ink. In addition, I decided to have it captioned "Poems are dust" in Olde English script, because I'm kind of classic like that. The total cost was $401. Not bad. And my doctor said the tetanus I got from it will clear up in a few months.
Editing a recent project |
Close-up |
Founded twelve years ago in 2010, LovingSylviaPlath is on Tumblr. She can also be found on two IG pages: Instagram here and also on Instagram here.
All links accessed 1 April 2022.
All links accessed 1 April 2022.
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