Discrimination is something you just need to get over if you want body piercings, people will be nice to you however there is no law saying they have to give you a job or do anything for you if you have piercings. Bottom line if you are working ask your employer "before" you get a piercing, if you are looking for work better be prepared to loose the piercing if you want a job. Human rights has nothing to do with body piercings and in a world filled with race, religion and cultural discrimination your piercings and you choice to have them are way down on the list. I have owned a body piercing studios for over 15 years and I still don't get the respect I deserve from the business community, it is what it is.
they like how it looks?
Amy has two ear piercings and her left eye brow pierced
straight in the eye
Nope. It's fake piercings.
Eye Against Eye was created in 2005.
Eye Against Eye has 80 pages.
The democrats really just want everyone to live, because its stated in your human rights that everyone has the right to live. Republicans believe in it for the sake of revenge and the whole "eye for an eye" idea.
It captures ones eye in a different light. When your born your born naked. no piercings, tattoos, etc. To see such body art such as a pierce attracts the eye,
To answer this question, you really need to define what you look like. Eye piercings and bellybutton piercings I think are quite ugly, but that's my opinion. I think ear piecings look nice, and they don't hurt as much.
Personally I think lip piercings and eye brow piercings are gross. I want nose piercing, cartilage (which is the upper part of your ear) and double pircing on my ear lobe. I think they look the best. Tongue piercings are also ok but I would never get one. Also naval (belly button) piercings look nice I think, especially if you u were bikinis or half shirts and are skinny.
It depends on the veins in your tongue, depending on where they are, there have been cases where people haven't been able to get that piercing.
After numbing the eye with a local anesthesia, the surgeon injects a small gas bubble into the inside of the eye. The bubble presses against the retina, flattening it against the back wall of the eye.