EMERALD BRIDGE ..... A Journey of the Heart

Tania Marie, Visionary Artist & Reiki Master Teacher

Tattoo Designing & EBook

Tattoos have been around for thousands of years as a form of marking the human body for different purposes and with varying meanings. Almost every ancient culture that has walked the Earth has created and worn tattoos and body art as a part of their symbolic way of life. Tattoo history spans over 5,000 years ago and is as diverse as the people that have worn them.

The art of mehndi, temporary art done on the body with henna, also dates back about 5,000 years. Mehndi is still used in ritualistic and religious ceremonies in India, but the earliest proven civilizations to use henna are the Babylonians, Assyrians and Sumerians
. Many ancient cultures have used both tattoos and mehndi for spiritual purposes.

Permanent tattoo designs, sometimes very simple, sometimes extremely elaborate, but always with deep personal meaning, have served as amulets, status symbols, signs of religious beliefs, declarations of love, adornments and even at times as forms of punishment. There is cultural significance to tattoos that is timeless.

It used to be that the earliest known tattoos were for a long time Egyptian, dated around 2,000 BC. Many mummies, which seemed to be exclusively female, showed evidence of tattooed designs on their bodies, especially on their thighs. But the timeline has been pushed back further with the discovery of the Iceman in 1991, carbon-dated at around 5,200 years old, from the area of the Italian/Austrian border who displayed tattoos on various parts of the body. His tattoos were examined and found to correspond to stress-induced degeneration areas, suggesting they may have been applied in order to help alleviate joint pain and therefore were therapeutic in nature.

It is believed by some that the Egyptian women practicing tattooing were dubious in nature and that tattoos were a mark of a prostitute, but it has since been proven that female mummies have been found in royal and elite burial areas and that at first considered a royal concubine, they now know at least one was a high status priestess. So there is no indication that tattooing was only for the "dancing girls" as they called them. Some believe that the tattoos were not marks of a prostitute or to ward off sexually transmitted diseases, but were actually functioning therapeutically as permanent forms of amulets to aid in pregnancy and child birth, as is suggested by their patterns and placements and the addition of the God Bes, who was the protector of women in labor, amongst other things. This helps to explain why Egyptian tattooing was purely restricted as a female custom. Egyptian tattoos were usually a dark or black pigment. Brighter colors, it seems, were widely used in other ancient cultures.

The Inuits, Nubians, Scythian Pazyryk, ancient Britons, Greek, Romans, Pre-Columbian cultures of Peru and Chile, Native Americans, Ancient Chinese and Japanese, and Polynesians to name a few are of the ancient cultures who practiced the art of tattooing for varying reasons. These included similar reasons like the Egyptian women, as a mark of nobility and high status (not having them was a statement of low birth, interesting huh?), as a mark of belonging to a religious sect or to an owner, if a slave, or to mark a criminal as punishment, symbolized devotion to a patron deity, which Roman soldiers adopted until Christianity spread with the belief that tattoos "disfigure that made in God's image." Tattoos were worn on every part of the body including the face, all with different meanings and significance.

The Polynesians from Tahiti give us the modern day word "tattoo" from their islander term, "tatatau" or "tattau," meaning to hit or strike. After James Cook's expedition there, it became fashionable amongst Europeans to have tattoos, especially men with high risk professions, in which case the tattoos carried amulet-like symbolism for protection.

Modern day tattoos are world-wide spread throughout every culture still including Japanese, Africans, and Maori of New Zealand to name a few and of course within the Western world as well. All of the symbolisms and reasoning stem from similarities to past ancient cultures, whether we're conscious of knowing what and why we're doing it for or not. Some may be for new reasonings and self expression, but the foundation behind it has been passed down for thousands of years and not so coincidentally, many of us get tattoos of ancient symbols from ancient civilizations and cultures. Cross-cultural influences have continued to play a significant part in how we express and live our lives, incorporating and melding things together. Interesting how everything is a cycling circle or spiral effect, linking us all in timeless experience. 

    





I enjoy transforming my physical being, loving to feel like a new person, to match the evolution I go through continually. I have always felt that the inner and outer should reflect each other. I am a very symbolic person and create my life as a work of art. My healing work provides me the opportunity to express my feelings and visions through different mediums. My canvas is ever changing, as am I. Sometimes it may be my art, other times my writing, and sometimes.....the canvas is simply me.




EBOOK

Because of my love for this ancient art, requests and questions from countless others and the desire to help conscious awareness through greater understanding and supportive inspiration on the subject, I decided to write an ebook about tattoos as a sacred artform. I'm looking forward to sharing this with you and believe it will be an eye and consciousness opening journey unlike any other. Will keep you posted on it's completion due out this summer 2010.  

It will hit on the spiritual aspect of tattooing and their symbolism, their history to bring to light misconceptions and relay interesting insights, how they can enhance your life and the lives of those around you who experience them and how they can support spiritual awakening, energetic opening and self empowerment. This will not be a simple picture book, but an enlightening spiritual journey through body art.


CUSTOM TATTOO DESIGNING
  

 
As a visionary artist and intuitive, I am able to tune into a person's essence and bring to life ideas to mirror creative visions. After countless requests to do custom tattoo designs and people's desires to have my creations on their skin, I decided to offer this service. The rate for design work is $125/hr. If you have an idea and are not sure exactly how to bring it to life, contact me for help and I will be happy to support your visions, infused with spiritual potency. I will need to know what you have in mind, whether specific or abstract and anything about yourself to help me tune into what would best portray the energy and image that would be most powerfully mirroring for you. 
 

TESTIMONIAL
 

"Tania, you nailed it!  My tattoo design is 100 percent me! I have thought about getting a tattoo for a long time but never knew what I wanted or how to go about it. I knew how important it was for me for it to be very symbolic and a unique representation of all the qualities within me. And voila! … here they are all here in this tattoo. When I met Tania, I knew that she was the one that would be able to take on this task. I couldn’t be happier. During the ‘unveiling’ I felt pure authentic joy and love and knew that this tattoo was going to be a new part of me, an extension of who I am. A quote by Mohammad Ali popped up for me … “Float Like a Butterfly and Sting Like a Bee” Interesting because this is what I feel when I see my tattoo and if I were to give my tattoo a name that’s what it would be.  The quote means to be able to move gracefully through life and able to deliver a punch. For me it ultimately means power and this is exactly what I know this tattoo is going to bring me. Whenever I look at it I truly feel the power within me. I know I can do anything I want in life and I know that this tattoo will be a constant reminder of that. Thank you Tania for bringing me this incredible gift."

 Lynne Day, Los Angeles, California  



Everything I do or create has symbolic meaning and for me tattooing has been a very spiritual process, helping me to embody certain energy and creating almost a living portal on my skin that is alive with meaningfulness. The timing, placement, image and symbol choices have all been integral to the sacred process in creating my body canvas of art. Each piece has significance to my life and soul and span many ancient cultures that have graced this Earth, including power animals and power symbols, etc. Many are placed over my chakras along my spine and even one at center of my solar plexus on my stomach.

I feel as if my back is like a visual story of my soul's history and essence and my hands and wrists like scriptures and conduit communicators, drawing and giving energy in and out.

It is my desire to bring back the ancient sacredness of tattooing and to help transcend the enculturated ideas and beliefs that have since been placed on something that once held a great honor and beauty and was much more than what we limit it to be today.

Judging a book by its cover has never been a wise assumption, as there is much value one can miss if we let programmed ideas run the show.

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