Think back for a moment. When you got your now-familiar tattoo, you were a kid in high school, and it was something cool to do, something you could be proud of. You went through it with absolute certainty, enamored with what it was going to do for you, sure that friends would be impressed by it. The image, too, was something to be proud of, a dragon and skull, with flames surrounding the image realistically -- they rose so high, in fact, that you could see the tattoo even when you wore a shirt and tie. That, too, was something to be proud of, and you wore it with pride through both high school and college.
Graduation day arrives, and you passed with flying colors. After four years of hard work you have obtained a degree as a business professional. It was easy picking out what you really wanted to do with the degree; Public Relations. Working with people is your forte, as was evident by how many friends you had in school. You are ready for work, and you are ready for the public. Customers will be satisfied with your techniques of placation, and customer satisfaction is number one in your priority list.
Next, comes your first job interview; it's with an established, large business, which is a good sign for your future's security and promise. You like to deal with people, and working in a large company will let you do just that. On the day you find out about the interview, you are excited, but determined to be a professional, too. The tattoo doesn't even cross your mind; it's been a part of you for so long. Three weeks before the interview, though, panic strikes. It does show on your neck even if you're wearing a shirt and tie, which means that yes, your new prospective employer is also going to be able to see it during the interview. That may raise questions about you, which could put that job you so desire in jeopardy.
Frantically, you search for a solution. How in the world are you going to cover up the neck ink? Looking for an answer, you come across many fads and gimmicky treatments. Creams and gels that supposedly eliminate the ink from your skin are pricey, and you discover to you chagrin they do not well. There has to be an alternative that eliminates the ink completely, and that does not cost so much. You finally find a promising solution: Laser tattoo removal.
Fortunately, laser tattoo removal is easy to do, and very effective painless. It remove the tattoo ink from your skin by using light wavelengths that penetrate your skin and disrupt the ink's chemical makeup. It takes just a couple of minutes to do the treatment, depending on how big the tattoo is and how much ink was used to make the tattoo. Different pigment types take different treatment levels, but the ink can be removed, and there won't be any scarring.
When a tattoo is removed through laser removal, the sensation is something like having a rubber band snapped on your skin. The facility doing the removal may put a topical cream on the area so that the nerve endings in the skin are numbed and discomfort is significantly lessened, almost eliminated. Depending on how big the tattoo is, it may take up to 10 treatments to remove, with 6 to 8 weeks in between each treatment, so that they ink is slowly removed, fading, from your skin.
Finally, you have something that works. You must bid adieu to your old friend, the tattoo, but it's off to a new life. You go off to your interview, confidence renewed, and you ace it; you get the job, and now, you have a secure future and a great job is yours. It was worth every penny to get the tattoo removed.
Graduation day arrives, and you passed with flying colors. After four years of hard work you have obtained a degree as a business professional. It was easy picking out what you really wanted to do with the degree; Public Relations. Working with people is your forte, as was evident by how many friends you had in school. You are ready for work, and you are ready for the public. Customers will be satisfied with your techniques of placation, and customer satisfaction is number one in your priority list.
Next, comes your first job interview; it's with an established, large business, which is a good sign for your future's security and promise. You like to deal with people, and working in a large company will let you do just that. On the day you find out about the interview, you are excited, but determined to be a professional, too. The tattoo doesn't even cross your mind; it's been a part of you for so long. Three weeks before the interview, though, panic strikes. It does show on your neck even if you're wearing a shirt and tie, which means that yes, your new prospective employer is also going to be able to see it during the interview. That may raise questions about you, which could put that job you so desire in jeopardy.
Frantically, you search for a solution. How in the world are you going to cover up the neck ink? Looking for an answer, you come across many fads and gimmicky treatments. Creams and gels that supposedly eliminate the ink from your skin are pricey, and you discover to you chagrin they do not well. There has to be an alternative that eliminates the ink completely, and that does not cost so much. You finally find a promising solution: Laser tattoo removal.
Fortunately, laser tattoo removal is easy to do, and very effective painless. It remove the tattoo ink from your skin by using light wavelengths that penetrate your skin and disrupt the ink's chemical makeup. It takes just a couple of minutes to do the treatment, depending on how big the tattoo is and how much ink was used to make the tattoo. Different pigment types take different treatment levels, but the ink can be removed, and there won't be any scarring.
When a tattoo is removed through laser removal, the sensation is something like having a rubber band snapped on your skin. The facility doing the removal may put a topical cream on the area so that the nerve endings in the skin are numbed and discomfort is significantly lessened, almost eliminated. Depending on how big the tattoo is, it may take up to 10 treatments to remove, with 6 to 8 weeks in between each treatment, so that they ink is slowly removed, fading, from your skin.
Finally, you have something that works. You must bid adieu to your old friend, the tattoo, but it's off to a new life. You go off to your interview, confidence renewed, and you ace it; you get the job, and now, you have a secure future and a great job is yours. It was worth every penny to get the tattoo removed.
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Another thing to check is what is involved in removing a tattoo if you decide you no longer want it. Find out about the latest technology at: St. Louis Tattoo Removal, then take a look at the results you can expect at St Louis Laser Tattoo Removal.