Fighting the Fatigue

September 4th, 2010

Knowing the game of poker and the odds of a hand are a small portion of a much larger picture when it comes to being a formidable opponent at the poker table. The art of calculating odds, reading opponents, and holding your poker face can only be improved with time. However, fatigue also affects your ability to control these elements of the game.

The condition of your body and mind are just as important when you are sitting at the table. Most mistakes are made not due to fatigue rather than a lack of knowledge. Just following your instincts can lead you to many final tables. However, When your tired you often over think, or miscalculate, the situation at hand.

Here are a few simple tips you may want to consider before sitting down at a table.

1. Get in shape: Like many athletes know, that when you body is fit, it is hard to fatigue. The heart muscle needs work outs too.

2. Avoid sugar: Sugar gives you a quick pep, but also will cause you to crash quick and hard. Using a good vitamin B loaded product will give you a longer, more natural pick up without the hard crash.

3. Take breaks: often players sit at the table too long. Getting up and pacing around between hands every once in awhile will help to keep the blood circulating and the endorphins within your body at a controllable level.

4. Breath: The act of breathing by itself is meant to not only nurture the body, but relax it as well. Take a second to breath deep.

5. Don’t chase the cards: Often I have seen players get upset by the cards they are dealt. The common response is to tilt and start trying to make hands out of nothing. This is mentally tasking and will fatigue a player faster than normal.

Dave has more information about mycustompokerchips.com/index.html custom poker chips and mycustompokerchips.com/index.html poker supplies at his website mycustompokerchips.com/index.html mycustompokerchips.com/index.html.

A Great Repertoire for the Beginning Classical Guitarist

September 3rd, 2010

One of the difficulties about learning to play a new instrument is figuring out a repertoire of easy yet great sounding pieces. Here is a suggested list of nine pieces that fulfill this perfectly.

One of the important parts of a repertoire for the classical guitarist is understanding that the music of the classical guitar spans several hundred years and several genres of musical history. This repertoire gives you a nice cross section of these times and genres without being too difficult to play. It is a great selection that shows off the incredible range of expression found in the classical guitar.

Moonlight Sonata - Beethoven - If you are a real beginner and would like to play an easy song that sounds great this is the first piece you should consider. It sounds absolutely beautiful in a haunting kind of way and it is a nice slow piece so you will be able to master it with little trouble. This is a great first classical guitar piece. It is a good example of the Romantic period of classical music as expressed by the guitar.

Allegro by Mozart - Another very easy piece to play and it sounds great. It has more of an early classical music feel to it. You will have heard this piece before and it won′t take you long to learn this. This is a great example of early classical music.

Pachelbel Canon in D This is a gorgeous piece for beginners. It is very famous and sounds wonderful. It has a beautiful harmony and melody. If you are looking for a piece of sheet music thats not too hard to play and sounds perfect for the classical guitar.

Claire De Lune Here is another great piece for the beginning classical guitarist. The best way to describe this is “Pretty”. It is just a pretty piece and no doubt you have heard it before.

Fur Elise - Beethoven - Awesome sounding piece, this is one of my favorites and if you are new to classical guitar or classical music I guarantee you that this piece will be familiar to you - It is almost as famous as Beethoven′s fifth.

Prelude in E Minor by Matteo Carcassi - Very easy piece to learn and sounds great because of the minor key. Great first or second piece to learn and right out of the Carcassi Method for classical guitar.

Espanoletta by Gaspar Sanz - Very easy piece to learn and it sounds great. It has this great feeling of being Spanish and also being from the early classical period. It is quite unique and kind of sounds like something Mozart would have written while on vacation in Spain!

Adelita by Francisco Tarrega - Awesome piece and one of my favorites. This is the first piece I had mastered for my repertoire. It is very Spanish in a slow and non-flamenco way.

Spanish romance - great sounding piece and a staple of every classical guitarist. It has a great melody and is played slowly so it sounds great without being too hard to learn.

All of these pieces are staples of the classical guitarist and the sheet music for them can be found at music stores or online. With a little digging you can probably find free transcriptions.

Will Kalif has been playing classical guitar for twenty years. For more information about the classical guitar visit his website at:

stormthecastle.com/classical_guitar/index.htm The Classical Guitarist

Martin Luther King - An Essay

September 3rd, 2010

Martin Luther King Jr.

Dr. King speaks of many of the racial prejudices and persecutions that they, African Americans, have suffered. Throughout the speech King uses the phrase “Now is the time…” (502), this makes the reader feel King’s view has utmost urgency. Dr. King stands strong on his view of non-violent protests saying, “Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.” (503) Dr. King tells the listener not to give up under pressure but to persevere because the day will come when King’s dream is recognized. Dr. King’s dream is “…a situation where little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls and walk together as sisters and brothers.” In his speech Dr. King hopes to persuade the “Great America″ to abolish all racial prejudice.

Dr. King uses many different but effective methods to convince the reader of his point. King uses the words from an old Negro spiritual, the famous line, “Free at last! free at last! Thank God almighty, we are free at last!” (505) This phrase serves as an exclamation point on an emotional speech that is sure to deeply move the reader. King quotes the song “America the Beautiful” stating that he wants everyone to sing it with new meaning. In his speech King comes across as a persecuted African American who wants a change for all. The voice King uses starts of as a soft but firm whisper then it gradually builds with the message it carries until it is the full roaring voice of freedom at the end.

Dr. King presents his arguments in a very original way. King focuses on the reader’s sense of right and wrong and goes on to appeal to the reader’s emotions. The speech is not as important today as when it was written in 1963; but it still serves as an important reminder. King’s argument is limited to a small audience in a sense but in day-to-day living comes into racial prejudice, either given or taken. Dr. King’s speech had to be on a level for the common people to completely understand it. He does this by relating himself with the crowd and by using common speech. Overall his argument moves the reader, it makes them fell really human. After reading King’s speech the reader realizes we’re all the same and there is no need for racial persecution. King has written an argument that has such lasting appeal that it is imperative that the reader reread King’s speech ever so often to rekindle their heartfelt conscience.

Dr. M. Cooper provides research and term paper assistance at TermPaperAdvisor TermPaperAdvisor and TermPapersMadeEasy.com TermPapersMadeEasy.com on the world-wide web. Dr. Copper has a M.S. degree in data communications and a Ph.D in Computer Information Systems. He is a retired Army officer and a Vietnam veteran.

Robert Burns Love Poem: “A Red, Red Rose”

September 3rd, 2010

Robert Burns, a poor man, an educated man, and a ladies’ man, is representative of Scotland, much like whisky, haggis, bagpipes, and kilts. He lived a life shortened by rheumatic heart disease, 1759-1796, but his life journey through poverty, informal education, disappointed love, nationalism, and literary and financial success can be identified by all Scots and common men the world over. He has become almost a national symbol of all things Scottish. His life is like a love story with a happy ending.

The Poet, Robert Burns

Robert Burns’s family raised seven children on sparse, rented farmland on the west coast of Scotland. The family cottage still stands as a proud tourist attraction. The family farm was not successful and the family moved from farm to farm. Life on the farm in western Scotland was harsh and Robert worked long hours with his father.

Burn’s father recognized the value of education and he managed to hire a local teacher to tutor Robert. He was an extremely bright student, mastering Shakespeare, current poets, French, Latin, philosophy, politics, geography, theology, and mathematics. His father read the Bible during the evenings around the cottage fireplace and Robert became an expert on the Bible and a devout Church member.

Robert Burns wrote his first poem at age 15. The poem was called “Handsome Nell” and was about his first love for a girl named Nellie Blair. Throughout his life, Burns was a charming and witty man, attracting the attention of numerous women. A dozen or more women can be identified as the inspiration for various poems. Burns wrote many famous love poems, including “A Red, Red Rose” and “One Fond Kiss.”

Here’s an excerpt from “Handsome Nell.”

“O once I loved a bonnie lass,

Aye, and I love her still;

And whilst that virtue warms my breast,

I’ll love my handsome Nell.”

Burns, in a later comment on this poem, stated that he had “never had the least thought or inclination of turning poet till I got once heartily in love, and then rhyme and song were, in a manner, the spontaneous language of my heart.”

The Turning Point

In 1786, at age 27, Robert Burns went through a major turning point in his life. He suffered a disappointing love affair with Jean Armour, who was pregnant with his twin sons. The local community and Armour’s father were outraged by the affair and her father rejected Burns’s offer of marriage.

Dejected and depressed, Burns made plans to leave Scotland and sail to Jamaica in the West Indies. To finance the trip, Burns submitted a volume of his poetry for publication.

The publication of 612 copies in a simple, unbound volume was called “Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect,” also sometimes known as “The Kilmarnock Edition.” The poems were well received in Edinburgh by socialites who were enchanted by the poems and amazed that a poor farmer could write so well.

So, instead of planning his escape to a new world, Burns planned a trip to Edinburgh. His confident manner, ingratiating style, and his obvious wit and intelligence brought Burns popularity and admiration. Soon, a second publication of his work was executed in Edinburgh.

The Growing Popularity

During his stay in Edinburgh, Robert Burns met printer James Johnson, who planned a project to print all of the folk songs in Scotland. This project enthralled Burns and embarked upon a journey throughout Scotland to collect as many folk songs as possible. Burns collected over 300 songs and wrote a few himself, including “A Red, Red Rose.”

One of the results of his travels throughout Scotland was that Robert Burns ingratiated himself to everyone he met and he rose to national prominence and popularity.

The collected songs were published by Johnson in six volumes and by George Thomson in a five volume set.

Another happy outcome of this turning point in Robert Burns’s life is that he was able to return home and marry his beloved Jean Armour, now with the blessing of her family.

Robert Burns continued to collect and write songs for The Scots Musical Museum, an anthology of traditional Scottish lyrical poems, until his untimely death from rheumatic heart disease in 1796.

Within a few years of his death groups of Robert Burns’s friends and fans gathered to promote his memory and to celebrate his life. By 1801, five years after his death, groups met on the anniversary of his death, but later they began to meet on the anniversary of his birth, January 25. Now there are many Burns clubs and societies who celebrate his memory with dinners, including haggis, and readings of his works.

The Poem, “A Red, Red Rose”

One of the most famous songs that Robert Burns wrote for this project and first published in 1794 was “A Red, Red Rose.” Burns wrote it as a traditional ballad, four verses of four lines each.

“A Red, Red Rose” begins with a quatrain containing two similes. Burns compares his love with a springtime blooming rose and then with a sweet melody. These are popular poetic images and this is the stanza most commonly quoted from the poem.

The second and third stanzas become increasingly complex, ending with the metaphor of the “sands of life,” or hourglass. One the one hand we are given the image of his love lasting until the seas run dry and the rocks melt with the sun, wonderfully poetic images. On the other hand Burns reminds us of the passage of time and the changes that result. That recalls the first stanza and its image of a red rose, newly sprung in June, which we know from experience will change and decay with time. These are complex and competing images, typical of the more mature Robert Burns.

The final stanza wraps up the poem’s complexity with a farewell and a promise of return.

“A Red, Red Rose” is written as a ballad with four stanzas of four lines each. Each stanza has alternating lines of four beats, or iambs, and three beats. The first and third lines have four iambs, consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable, as in da-dah, da-dah, da-dah, da-dah. The second and fourth lines consist of three iambs. This form of verse is well adapted for singing or recitation and originated in the days when poetry existed in verbal rather than written form.

A Red, Red Rose

by Robert Burns

O my luve’s like a red, red rose.

That’s newly sprung in June;

O my luve’s like a melodie

That’s sweetly play′d in tune.

As fair art thou, my bonnie lass,

So deep in luve am I;

And I will love thee still, my Dear,

Till a′the seas gang dry.

Till a’ the seas gang dry, my Dear,

And the rocks melt wi’ the sun:

I will luve thee still, my Dear,

While the sands o’life shall run.

And fare thee weel my only Luve!

And fare thee weel a while!

And I will come again, my Luve,

Tho’ it were ten thousand mile!

*****************************

Garry Gamber is a public school teacher and entrepreneur. He writes articles about real estate, health and nutrition, and internet dating services. He is the owner of anchoragehomes.inetusanow.net Anchorage-Homes.com and thedatingadvisor.com TheDatingAdvisor.com.

Alan Jackson “Precious Memories” Gospel Country CD Review

September 3rd, 2010

My sister told me about this CD and I’m glad she did. It’s a great CD on which all of the songs are done very well both technically and musically.

Alan Jackson does a great job singing the old time favorites like Blessed Assurance, How Great Thou Art, The Old Rugged Cross, and Jackson’s voice is an absolutely perfect fit to these timeless hymns. You can almost picture him standing in the church pew with his family singing the songs.

This is a “feel good” album done in the deep rich voice of Alan Jackson accompanied by his wife and two daughters and is by far one of Jackson’s best offerings.

This CD is simply a wonderful collection of songs for anyone who enjoys Alan Jackson, or Spiritual Hymns in general. Get it. You won’t be disappointed.

While this entire album is outstanding some of my favorites are track 2, Softly And Tenderly, track 4 When We All Get To Heaven, and track 7, Are You Washed In The Blood?

My SmoothLee Bonus Pick, and the one that got Sore [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is track 1, Blessed Assurance which he sings as though it were written for his voice. Perfect.

Precious Memories Release notes:

Alan Jackson originally released Precious Memories on February 28, 2006 on the Arista Records label.

CD Track List Follows:

1. Blessed Assurance
2. Softly And Tenderly
3. I Love To Tell The Story
4. When We All Get To Heaven
5. ‘Tis So Sweet To Trust In Jesus
6. In The Garden
7. Are You Washed In The Blood?
8. I’ll Fly Away
9. What A Friend We Have In Jesus
10. Standing On The Promises
11. Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus
12. Leaning On The Everlasting Arms
13. Old Rugged Cross, The
14. How Great Thou Art
15. I Want To Stroll Over Heaven With You

Personel include: Alan Jackson (vocals, guitar); Brent Mason (acoustic guitar); Gary Prim (piano, organ); Keith Stegall (piano); John Wesley-Ryles, Melodie Crittenden (background vocals).

Clyde Lee Dennis, a.k.a. SmoothLee is a life long music fanatic on a mission to “Soothe Souls Worldwide through positive messages and peaceful, soothing music”. A mission he accomplishes on a daily basis through his company

Short History of Jazz

September 2nd, 2010

Jazz is sometimes referred to as “America’s classical music”. It has become a diverse genre with its roots in native American and African music; in particular, the blues, spirituals and rag time. Jazz first became a defined music form in the early 1920 springing from the US cities of New Orleans and later Chicago. Early Jazz was characterized by traditional rhythms and melodies being taken and improvised upon, giving a combination of swing and syncopation. Early Jazz performers of note included Jelly Roll Morton, Fats Domino, Bix Beiderbecke and Louis Armstrong. A good taste of this period can be gained by listening to recordings of Louis Armstrong’s Hot Fives and Hot Seven ensembles.

By the 1930 Jazz had spread out of its local bases in South American and became more mainstream attracting white musicians as well. One development of Jazz was the big bands such as Ben Goodman and Glen Miller. Glen Millers big band became very successful and popular, but offering little scope for improvisation jazz aficionados saw it as more of swing rather than real jazz. However other big bands such as Duke Ellington and Count Basie provided some of the all time great Jazz recordings.

Whilst the Big Band led jazz in a more conventional direction. The late 1930s and 1940s also saw jazz develop in another direction through the creation of the new “Be Bop” craze. Be Bop is epitomized by the great musicians such as Charlie “Bird” Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Sonny Rollins. These musicians took Jazz to new heights of improvisation, loosening the adherence to harmony’s and rigid chord structures.

Unlike previous forms of jazz, Be bop was not designed for dancing but was seen more like an opportunity to showcase the musical expertise of the performers. Some of the great be bop recordings came about as the performers played off each other, each striving for greater excellence and improvisation. One of the greatest recordings of this period was “Jazz at Masey Hall” 1953 featuring Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker amongst others, it is a very good example of live jazz music. In the 1960s Be bop evolved into a form of “free jazz” with little if any adherence to conventional harmonies and chord structures. One of the best selling jazz recordings which characterized this new form was “A Kind of Blue” by Miles Davis.

Alas many of the great jazz performers led tragic lives, a seemingly very high percentage died prematurely, inevitably from drug and alcohol misuse. Unfortunately many young performers came to associate drugs with being a successful jazz performer so jazz developed a strong reputation for association with narcotics.

To play Jazz music successfully a classical background is definitely an advantage. To be a successful jazz player you need to be able to learn the chords and scales of the song. With this basic structure you can then improvise around these chords to give the improvised or jazz effect. However to be a great jazz musician a lot more is needed than formal training, successful improvisation is a difficult skill that appears to come easily to a rare few.

Richard is an economics teacher in Oxford and is a member of the poetseers.org/sri_chinmoy/sri_chinmoy_centre Sri Chinmoy Centre Richard edits a site on the music of srichinmoysongs.com/ Sri Chinmoy

Christopher Barran

September 2nd, 2010

Song of the Angels

This 12 song CD is interesting. The songs are relaxed yet possess a power uniquely their own. Long after it finished playing, I found remnants of the tunes floating in my head, calming me.

The first cut – the title song - starts the CD with Barran’s distinctive voice and style. Then the CD flows into the next tune, ‘Skies are Blue’, and a song I remember from years ago. It’s like meeting an old friend. It’s changed, grown but still made me smile, as did ‘Gypsy Winds of Change’.

Christopher does a cover of one of my favorite songs, the 1969 ‘One Tin Soldier’. He does it justice, managing to bring tears to my eyes.

I have known Barran for many years and hearing ‘Song of Angels’ I was pleasantly surprised. The young musician that I rocked with all those years ago has grown and matured and I heard that in the songs, in his voice. His life’s experiences are being poured from his soul into his art. These songs will tear at your heart but they will also mend those rips leaving you feeling more complete than you were before you started.

This is a CD to listen to by candlelight, either alone or with the special someone. But it is one to definitely listen to.

Check out Christopher Barran at www.christopherbarran.com

Karen Magill
Author of The Bond, A Paranormal Love Story and
Let Us Play, A Rock ‘n Roll Love Story
karenmagill.com karenmagill.com
lulu.com/karenmagill lulu.com/karenmagill

The Silver Club Casino

September 2nd, 2010

The Book is run by Leroy’s Sports Book and is easy to get to. This is the best place to go if you want to make a bet and not wait in a line. It is also the best place to watch a game if you do not like big crowds. The Sports Book is very clean and it is not too smoky, very important if you are a non-smoker. The Silver Club Sports Book is located on the top floor, which is also home to 2 nice bars, several big screens, TV’s throughout the top floor, pool tables, and slot machines.

The staff is very friendly and rewards you with a drink toke or two on almost every bet made. The drinks are only $1 during the games, which makes it nice to drink as much as you want and not lose all your winnings in the process.

This might not seem like a big deal but it is very nice not to feel like a vagrant when you make a bet by having to ask for a drink ticket. It is also nice to have people waiting on you and treat you the way a customer should be treated. There are other places that make it a big deal to give out drinks to their customers. Why? I have no idea, if anything, they should be handing them out like water hoping that you stay and come back up to the window with a few in you and make the mistake of picking winners in your intoxicated state. Which I might add is the reason they feed you drinks while at the tables. This could be devastating to a gambler, so please be smart in your investments.

You are also only a three minute walk to John Ascuaga’s Nugget Casino which is home to the Club Cal Neva Sports Book.

The Silver Club Casino is a great place to bet and visit when in town. Locals use the easy access to make a bet and get on their way home. Locals also go to the Silver Club when they want to relax in a clean atmosphere and enjoy a drink while they watch the games. Visitors are made to feel like locals at the Silver Club.

We will review the table limits and the hotel at a later date.

Leo Mendelsohn

Thehooks

thehooksfootballpicks.com thehooksfootballpicks.com

Staying Alive

September 2nd, 2010

What if someone handed you a pill and said, “Take this pill and you will live to be 120 years old.”

Would you take the pill?

What if they said, “Not only will you live longer, but your body will stop aging from this point on. You can be 120 years old with the heart, mind and body that you have now.”

Would you take the pill?

I know a lot of people who would take such a pill without so much as a second thought. These are the same folks now spending fortunes on spray-on hair, mega-vitamins that contain bits of George Burns’ DNA, liposuction, breast implants, nose jobs, eye jobs, tummy tucks, butt lifts, ear bobs, and the ever-popular Turkey Neck Reduction procedure, wherein the doctor pulls the loose skin back from beneath your chin and ties it in a decorative bow at the top of your head. These people are always taking something out of their bodies and putting something else back in, in a neverending quest to stay young. They are the Mr. and Mrs. Potato Heads of our generation.

But what about you? You’re not a shallow, narcissistic, pinhead with interchangeable parts. To the contrary, you’re a very intelligent person, grounded in common sense and analytical thought. You know that it’s not the length of your time here on Earth that really matters, but how you spend the time you have. Quality, not quantity, is the best measure of one’s life.

So, if someone said, “Take this pill and you will live to be 120,” would you take the pill?

I ask this in light of last week’s announcement by the Geron Corporation, a Menlo Park, California biomedical firm, that they have - quite literally - discovered what makes our biological clocks lose time over the years and eventually flash “12:00.”

The answer begins with the discovery of “Telomeres,” the Energizer Bunnies of the DNA world.

Here’s the scientific explanation of Geron Corp’s findings: At the tips of our chromosomes are strands of DNA called Telomeres. When our cells divide, as they do time and again over the course of our lives, some of our Telomeres fall off in the process. The more our cells divide, the more Telomeres we lose.

In other words, it’s the loss of Telomeres that causes our hair to fall out, our ears and nose to get bigger, our backs to bow, our fingers to crook, our teeth to turn to chalk, our plumbing to leak, our demeanors to grow cranky, and our skin to resemble a prune that has been dipped in a cup of Clorox Bleach.

Bottom line: We grow old, we look and feel like hell, we die. Have a nice day.

But wait, there is hope. Geron Corp scientists claim to have found a way not only to stop Telomeres from falling off dividing cells, but to put Telomeres back on cells that are TD (Telomere Deficient, a term of DNA political correctness). This process of Telomere regeneration involves the use of the Hubble Space Telescope, the actor who played Tattoo on “Fantasy Island,” and a really tiny tube of Super Glue. (Just seeing if you were paying attention.)

Geron Corp claims that it can rejuvenate Telomeres through something called “gene therapy,” which, I’m guessing, involves a little, bitty couch and a teeny-weeny psychiatrist, probably Dr. Ruth. Telomere rejuventation can also occur when the genes are exposed to certain enzymes, scientists say, which may one day be available in pill form.

Hence the question: Would you take the pill?

The one thing Geron Corp’s study doesn’t cover is, who’s going to foot the bills for all these years of extra life? Call me ungrateful, call me lazy, but I don’t want to live to be 120 if it just means having an extra 50 years of hard labor tacked onto my current life sentence. I have a hard enough time getting up every morning now and going off to work. Just wait until I’m 120!

And when the government raises the retirement age to 95, look out! Talk about a bunch of crotchety old people with the hearts, minds and bodies of twenty year olds. You say you want a revolution? Well, here it is.

So answer the question, good citizen.

Would you take the pill?

Would I?

I’m not sure. Give me another fifty years to think it over.

Tim Knox
Entrepreneur, Author, Speaker, Radio Host
Check Out Tim’s New Radio Show! =>

How to Prevent Infection & Conduct Effective Aftercare for New Tattoos

September 1st, 2010

There are practical steps which should be undertaken to ensure good hygiene and healing of newly tattooed skin. I have seen the effects of poor caring and unclean practices. It simply ruins the tattoo and bodily infection in itself has many health implications. Take practical tattoo aftercare steps or you potentially will wear the signs of mistreatment alongside your tattoo design.

Washing

Using antibacterial soap with water, gently wash the tattooed area with your hands, do not use a cloth as this can easily disturb the area and delay proper healing. Under normal conditions the above should be done at least 3 times a day, more if the area has been subjected to excessive sweat or dirt of any kind.

Drying & Bandages

Only ever pat-dry the cleansed area, no not scrub or rub in any way as again this could disturb the area and delay healing. Apply A&ampD oil or an antibacterial ointment, cover with sterile bandages and tape down securely. It is important to keep new tattoos bandaged as clothes and other items will irritate and potentially run the risk of infection. If you find that the bandages stick to your skin, simply soak in cool water until the bandage freely becomes loose, do not pull or tug at it the bandage. Afterwards, use more A&ampD oil to ensure no excessive sticking occurs. It is also quite normal for some coloration of the bandages from the tattoo in the early stages of healing.

Healing time

Depending, healing will occur between 2-10 weeks, the tattoo will more likely than not itch during the stages of healing - resist! Do not pick or scratch. Eventually the skin will stop flaking, at this time use lotion to keep the area moisturized; you should not need bandages or ointment any more at this stage.

Keep the tattoo away from direct sunlight during healing and cover if you use a sun bed. It is also advisable to use a factor 50 sun block afterwards to preserve your design after healing has happened. tribal-tattoo.co.uk/ Go here for more tattoo information

Dos and don’ts

Do not go swimming in fresh, salt or chlorinated water for 2 weeks after your new tattoo Do not visit any steam rooms for 2 weeks after your new tattoo Do not use Vaseline or hydrogen peroxide on your tattooDo use loads of ointment or A&D oilDo cover your tattoo when sunbathing with clothes or sun block Do consult a medical practitioner at the first signs of infection or anything that seems abnormal as a result of your tattoo.

Good judgment should always be exercised in tattoo design, artist and aftercare and professional advice should be sought with any matters relating to abnormal healing or infection from your tattoo. Go tribal-tattoo.co.uk/ here for more information and tattoo designs.

Award Winning Tattoo Designs - Get it Right First Time!

Tribal-Tattoo.co.uk Tribal-Tattoo.co.uk

Free eBook: 84-Page Tattoo & Body Piercing Infection ebook

Free eBook: How to Tattoo in 12 Easy Steps