‘Biggest regret’: Woman’s bum tattoo disaster goes viral
A woman has revealed she has the name of a rapper tattooed on her rear end – but the misspelled ink is listed as one of her top regrets.
A US content creator has revealed one of her most embarrassing mistakes, revealing she has a tattoo of a rapper’s name inked on her bottom, but it’s spelled wrong.
Sydney Jo shared the humiliating revelation to her 1000 TikTok followers while she was at a hair salon recently.
She said the inking was one of her “top five biggest regrets” before explaining why it was so embarrassing.
“I thought it would be funnier, like my top five biggest regrets, like getting the tattoo on my a**. Spelled wrong,” the woman says as both she and the hairstylist break out in laughter, The New York Post reported.
The hairstylist jumps in to say she had forgotten about that part of Sydney’s history.
In a follow up video, Sydney revealed yet another embarrassing detail about the body art piece.
“So it’s not a word, it’s a rapper’s name,” she said while laying in bed.
“That sounds so awful, not a word but the name of a rapper.”
Dozens were begging her to reveal who the rapper was, but she was tight-lipped about their identity.
She said that detail was something she would likely never share with her online following.
Sydney did mention in the caption she tries to forget about the tattoo daily, which could be easy since it is behind her.
“Nooooo, I need to know,” one commenter couldn’t take the cliffhangers and wanted her to reveal the rapper’s name.
Sydney, who is currently living in Denver, creates videos of her daily life while showing off her mental and spiritual healings and therapy sessions, with her bio listed as “self-love w/ a lil bit of spice.”
More Coverage
While Sydney didn’t show off the embarrassing art on her backside, she did display a tattoo on her right hand that reads “Not Penny’s Boat,” a reference to the TV show Lost.
In another video she says the tattoo on her palm “means the world to me” but described it as the “most painful tattoo ever”.
This story originally appeared in NY Post and reproduced with permission