Chicago Tribune

Go ahead, get that tattoo. Your boss shouldn't mind.

CHICAGO - Nora Flanagan's first tattoos hid strategically under her clothing. An aspiring teacher, Flanagan worried the ink could cost her a job.

"There was definitely an idea of what a teacher should look like," Flanagan, now 42, recalls of her early career in the late 1990s. Teachers wore long, wholesome floral skirts, not child-corrupting body art.

But several years into her job at Chicago's Lane Tech College Prep High School, Flanagan got a teaching award, tenure and greater confidence. She shed the floral skirts, slipped on her Doc Martens and accumulated more tattoos, letting them creep visibly down her arms.

Now chair of the English department at Northside College Prep High School, Flanagan is covered in tattoos from her knuckles to her collarbone, plus some on her calves, and she wears them proudly.

"I'm the tattooed teacher," said Flanagan, adding that she has gotten no complaints from parents or administration. "It's a big deal to the kids for a day and then

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune4 min read
Brad Biggs: Options At ‘Premium Positions’ Give Bears GM Ryan Poles Confidence At No. 9. Now He Just Has To Nail The Pick.
CHICAGO — Some calculated decisions aimed at fulfilling long-range plans — plus a dose of good fortune — have put Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles in the most enviable position for the past 3 1/2 months. Since last season ended, Poles has bee
Chicago Tribune3 min read
Bulls Guard Alex Caruso Will Listen To His Body, But A Left Ankle Injury Puts Status In Doubt For Friday’s Game In Miami
CHICAGO — Alex Caruso’s status for the Chicago Bulls’ play-in tournament game Friday in Miami is in jeopardy after a left ankle injury was deemed a “significant” sprain, according to ESPN. Caruso spent a long time getting treatment on the ankle after
Chicago Tribune10 min read
The Most Infamous Serial Killers All Seem To Have Something In Common — They’re From The Midwest
What is it about the Midwest that breeds so many serial killers? What is in the soil that grows the sort of grisly murderers who launch a million headlines? Adam Rapp has wondered for a long time. He was born in Chicago and raised in Joliet in the 19

Related Books & Audiobooks