A Mom With 800 Tattoos Is Desperate for Work as Everyone Refuses to Hire Her
Tattoos have always been a matter of disagreement, especially between different generations. But with time, people are becoming more open to body art. Melissa Sloan is a woman who experienced another side of body art attitude, and once she was even mistaken for a bank robber. Let’s see how this mom bravely copes with societal opinions and what she has to say about stereotypes.
Melissa has seen a lot of judgement because of her inked appearance.
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Melissa Sloan, 46, who is from Wales in the United Kingdom, used to have a job cleaning toilets. But she says she now can’t find a similar job because of the tattoo art that covers her face and body. The mom is struggling to find paid employment because people cast judgment on her inked-up look.
“I can’t get a job,” Sloan says in her interview. “I applied for a job cleaning toilets where I live, and they won’t have me because of my tattoos.”
The mother-of-2 is absolutely puzzled by people’s criticism.
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Any job thats wfh should be good... Could do zoom therapy or test videogames or compete online chess
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Melissa sincerely can’t figure out why people would even bother thinking about the tattoos that she has. “People have said I have never had a job in my life, but I have had one once, and it didn’t last long,” she says. “If someone offered me a job tomorrow, I would go and work — I would take that offer.”
Melissa started getting tattoos when she was 20 and it quickly became her obsession. She has a special passion for facial tattoos and has no bare skin left on her face. She’s inked over her old tattoos 3 times, and now she has a multi-layered collage on her face.
Despite all her struggles, she doesn’t want to give up on her passion.
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You're not serious, are you? If she could do customer service, from home, I think she should be considered for the job.
Despite her struggles with finding work, Melissa says that she still gets at least 3 new tattoos each week, describing herself as “addicted.”
“If I make it to 70, I’ll still be getting them,” she said. “Every bit of skin will be covered even if I’m turning blue, my face is already turning blue — I look like a Smurf.”
If you are interested in stories about people who break stereotypes, here’s another one for you to read. Find out about a tattoo-covered doctor who proved that looks can’t stop anyone from being a good professional.
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