When getting a tattoo some people don?t know that they are doing something that will be a permanent addition to? their body. It could be a long plotted addition, something done on the spur of the moment,( like after a few to many drinks), or due to peer pressure from your devoted friends.
What ever the reason, it?s there for excellent, or at least until you choose to get rid of it and that?s when you find out how the word permanent applies to a tattoo. It means it damned hard to remove the thing. That once cherished piece of body art is deep in the skin, flesh really, and won?t be budged without a fight.
Tattoos are very territorial, like your neighbors? pit bull, it doesn?t want any thing invading its space and it can place up a pretty nasty fight to hold its ground.
Using sweet talk and a handful of tattoo fade cream won?t work any better than sweet talk and dog biscuit will get that bulldog to keep from biting the crap out of you just because your intentions are excellent and you?re a nice person. To the bulldog and the tattoo you?re the? trespasser, a weirder to be dealt with harshly if necessary.
Give that dog a biscuit every day and he?ll gladly eat it,? he may even pretend to be lulled into a passive state, but hop the fence and he?ll still bite the crap out of you. That?s sort of the way a tattoo removal/gel works. It fades the skin pigment above the tattoo and you reckon ?wow, this stuff really works!?.
Three months and $250.00 later (the bite) you?ve got a light spot on your skin and the tattoo is still staring up at you, unchanged, unmoved and unimpressed. But, the excellent thing is your skin is really unaffected ? soft, smooth and unscarred. Unfortunately most tattoo removal cream companies, like pitbulls,? offer no refunds ? a total waste money and dog biscuits.
To get rid of the dog and the tattoo you?ve got to get rough, there is no way around it. No matter how hard you wish, how many coins you toss in the local fountain, that tattoo ain?t goin nowhere until you start cooking (laser) or peeling (Nuviderm).
The ink is there and it must be forcibly removed and in the process your skin will be heated, blistered, made dry and flaky, possibly blistered, maybe hurt like hell, possibly scar and for all this you get to pay several hundred, maybe a thousand or two dollars. It?s call laser tattoo removal.
?Or you can forcibly remove that tattoo and in the process your skin may slightly and temporarily burn, made dry and flaky, possibly itch, maybe scab and if you don?t follow directions it could possibly leave a scar all for less than $40.00 for a 3?x3? tattoo. It?s called Nuviderm.
One ounce of Nuviderm has the ink removing power of up to $1000.00 of? laser treatments. If? you can?t handle Nuviderm you sure as heck can?t handle laser.
To continue with the dog analogy, Nuviderm is like a Lab ? it?ll treat you right as long as you read and follow instructions and don?t abuse its tattoo removal power, dilute the concentrate before using, it?s in the instructions. Laser is like a bulldog on a chain, straining to bust lose and attack in the only way it knows ? with a ferocity you will not like.

I’ve been doing some research on the web about