No visible tattoos, guys and gals.
Long time lurker here and decided to share my story. I'm a little older (24) and a little wiser than when I first thought I was going into the Marines. I'm about three years late due to some ankle surgeries among other things.
If you are thinking about getting a tattoo and are not commissioned yet..my advice is don't do it. I'm $600, as of today, out of pocket into the removal of a $75 BLACK (and not very dark) tattoo on my wrist. Colors are harder to remove, black is the easiest. It is just now starting to turn brown after three months. I have at least another session left to go before I ship to OCS in May. Even then, I can't be certain it will be gone, but they have my receipts for it and pictures with blisters and such, so they said ok. I also ran into an issue because it is not in english. It is a phrase written in Gaelic.
Not only did I have to jump through hoops to get it removed, I had to have it translated. I sent definitions off the web. Not good enough. A friends father is an Irishman and fluent in Gaelic - his letter was not good enough. Finally, I got lucky. My OSO had found that a local university had an Irish studies department, and they were able translate it. That finally satisfied the translation.If not, I'm sure I would have had to pay a linguist to translate it for me. The same goes for Kanji symbols, Arabic etc. - they will all have to be translated.
Hoops, yes, but worth it since this is what I want to do. I'm trying to save you the hassle.
As far as pain: It hurts like hell having it removed to put it mildly. They also say black is the easiest color to remove, and does not hurt as much as colors. I'd rather get another one over my other ribcage than get another one removed. There are blisters, potential for scarring etc. I have had blisters, and it is starting to scar a little. If you want a tattoo, get one after you are in, and in a place where it won't show in PT gear. That's my suggestion if you absolutely have to have one.
I didn't want it gone, but the Marines said it had to go. They are becoming very picky about tattoo waivers. Thank God the one on my ribcage is a-ok and I received a waiver for it. It's pretty big.
While I like my tattoos, hindsight is always 20/20. In my mind, it was a bad decision to make knowing I'd be going into the military.
Hope this story helps someone make the right decision.