like a tattoo with a better story
Jan. 24th, 2007 08:58 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Eschara, "A Scar is a Story".
Perhaps morbid to some, but I rather like scars - usually unwanted but all highly individual, signs that you've been living your life.
Most my scars are the usual childhood bumps and jabs - run into the sofa here, a chickenpox dent there. The one that's still barely visible on my chin has a good story behind it though - I got it when I sailed over my bike handlebars while racing my sister - I skidded on gravel and landed directly on my chin. It scared me more than it hurt, and while the stitches made it heal fairly cleanly I still have a bit of roughness there.
Any good stories?
Perhaps morbid to some, but I rather like scars - usually unwanted but all highly individual, signs that you've been living your life.
Most my scars are the usual childhood bumps and jabs - run into the sofa here, a chickenpox dent there. The one that's still barely visible on my chin has a good story behind it though - I got it when I sailed over my bike handlebars while racing my sister - I skidded on gravel and landed directly on my chin. It scared me more than it hurt, and while the stitches made it heal fairly cleanly I still have a bit of roughness there.
Any good stories?
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 03:02 am (UTC)I also still have 4 stitch marks below my right eye from the obligatory conking of my head on the corner of the coffee table at age 4. They are still big and visible because it took 5 doctors/nurses/extra sets of hands to hold me down while they were stitching me up. I was hurting and scared and I wanted EVERYONE to know about it, so I was fighting the anaesthetic. If they gave me any more I could have stopped breathing, so they just rounded up a bunch of people to hold down the screaming flailing 4-year-old while they stitched my face closed.