It was over 50 years ago when I saw my first snake tattoo. My father  proudly showed off his snake and dagger tattoo design he just had inked  on his upper arm. I liked it too as he had incorporated my name in the  design. He told me then he chose this design to represent strength and  protection. If he were alive today, maybe he say something different,  but I'm sure, in that tangled web of tattoos he eventually ended up  with, this was still one of his favourites.
What is it that still  draws people to this design? There are many answers to this and I will  name just a couple. For example, the snake's popularity may have  something to do with the rich history of myths and legends. One such  myth is that of the ancient Greek myth of Medusa, the beautiful snake  haired woman, who had the power to turn men into stone with a single  glance, and I'm sure we know of a few women who still have that power  today.
Snakes and serpents have a long mythological history  associated with good and evil, life and death, beginnings and endings.  When a snake sheds its skin it is seen as a symbol of rebirth, change,  and healing.
Another tale of re-birth is that of the Ancient  Greeks who had Ouroboros, a snake curled into a circle biting its own  tail. The idea being that the continuing eating and re-growing of the  tail is a symbol of the eternal cycle of ruin and re-birth.
The  shedding of skin by the snake has also been associated with re-birth or  new beginnings. The ancient Greeks believed snakes were sacred to the  god of medicine Asclepius who had a staff with serpents wrapped around  it, which you can still see today as a symbol in modern medicine.
What  about the story of Hydra, a 9 headed serpent defeated by Hercules. The  story goes Hercules had a difficult time killing the Hydra because when  he cut one head off two heads would grow back. He eventually solved the  problem by burning the stumps to stop another head growing, and the  Hydra lived no more.
In some mythologies snakes are seen as the  keepers of wisdom and sacred secrets. But the snake has also been show  as a symbol of evil, death, or deceit. In Christianity, the serpent  tricks Adam and Eve into disobeying God. Perhaps due to the deadly venom  many snakes possess, myths involving snakes have often portrayed them  as evil.
In Australia, India, and Africa, where snake myths are  related to rainbows, and rainbows are often associated with rain and  fertility. I like the story of Da, a mythological African serpent who  kept the oceans and sky in place and we could catch a quick look at Da  when a rainbow appeared.
Another reason for the snake's popularity  as a tattoo design is that you can be incorporated with any other  design, such as, hearts and daggers, or skulls and dragons. The beauty  of the snake tattoo design is it doesn't look out-of-place with any  other tattoo design.









 





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