A WOMAN whose tattoo addiction has got her dumped multiple times said she has no plants to quit now.
Savannah Haskay, from Utah, has spent over £12,000 on tattoos over the years and eventually wants to be almost entirely covered in them.
3Savannah got her first tattoo when she was just 15-years-oldCredit: @gritty.ssh3She plants to be almost entirely covered in inkings one dayCredit: @gritty.ssh
The 27-year-old told Truly she doesn’t think her addiction is a bad thing and she still looks forward to each new inking.
After getting her first tattoo, an anatomical human heart on her hip, when she was 15, her dad encouraged her love of ink and made sure she went to the best artists.
Now, Savannah has tonnes of tattoos, including a blacked-out forearm, a wire fence on her neck, a rose on her chest and a heart under her eye.
Her bold look isn’t always loved by her friends and family, who have told her to slow down or to avoid more visible tattoos before.
Savannah’s ex-boyfriends also have mixed opinions about her ever-growing tattoo collection.
“I’ve definitely had arguments with some of my exes about my tattoos,” she said.
But it’s not just past flames who have strong thoughts about her look, it affects her current dating life is strange ways too.
“They assume I don’t have a job, or I’m on drugs, and I love being able to prove them wrong,” Savannah, who’s a biochemistry student working in cancer search, said.
Men also tend to think she’s “stupid” or a “freak” in the bedroom when the first see the tattoo fan, but she sees the funny side of it.
The tattoo fan decided to get some of her exes opinions on her new facial inking, and although they were mostly supportive they admitted that hasn’t always been the case.
“It definitely felt like playing second fiddle to tattoo quest,” one of them said.
Another ex admitted he worries about her future career as someone covered in tattoos, especially in her industry.
“They typically don’t hire a lot of people with a lot of tattoos,” he said.
3Her love of tattoos has been a touchy subject in past relationships