DALLAS - Allen Falkner's
tongue is just one of his unusual features. It is split down the middle, and
when he sticks it out, it looks like a two-pronged snake tongue.
The alteration, along with others to the 36-year-old Dallas man's body might
appear shocking, but they're standard for people in the underground activity
known as body modification. It's a trend that has been growing steadily for
about a decade, attracting more followers now that tattoos and simple piercings
are more mainstream.
"I think there's definitely more and more interest all the time," said
Falkner, owner of a Dallas tattoo and piercing shop called Obscurities.
Extreme body modification features a wide range of alterations, including
some that are illegal in Texas and elsewhere. Some people get horns implanted on
their heads. Some install magnets in their hands, creating a "sixth sense" for
feeling magnetic fields. Others remold their ears to make them pointy.
"People want, I think in general with society, especially the younger sect to
be different," said Luis Garcia, international liaison for the Association of
Professional Piercers, which takes no official stance on the modifications.
"It's not different anymore to have your navel pierced."
Falkner did his work himself, experimenting with various methods and
instruments that included scalpels and string. Already sporting multiple tattoos
and piercings, he said he further modified his body for aesthetic reasons, and
in part just to see if he could.
Falkner runs several Web sites dedicated to the topics and said he gets
e-mails all the time from people interested in modifying themselves. Likewise,
Garcia said people often ask for implants, split tongues, scarring or other
procedures at his shop in Philadelphia.
With television shows profiling tattoo shops and increasing numbers of
piercings in the mainstream, more people are searching for procedures for the
"one-upping factor," Garcia said.
"I've had people as young as 15 inquire," Garcia said, noting that he won't
accommodate their requests for legal reasons.
And neither will most established tattoo and piercing shops. Extreme
modifications are banned in a handful of states, including Texas and Delaware,
which specifically prohibit tongue splitting. But similar procedures usually
fall under a legislative gray area. Many artists also won't do them for fear of
lawsuits or insurance fiascos, Garcia said.
"It's definitely underground," he said. "Any person that does implants out of
their shop is taking a big risk."
He cited health consequences as the main hurdle to widespread practice.
Garcia had his transdermal chest implants, a type of implant anchored under the
skin but protruding outside, removed after a few years. He got "a couple of
infections that were an annoyance and just a constant irritation," he said.
Falkner also removed some implants from his wrist because they constantly
banged against things or got in the way.
Doug McBride, spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services,
said underground and non-professional alterations could end in problems.
"If this is being done by unqualified people using equipment and facilities
that are not sanitized or sterile, then you're going to have that increased risk
of infection," he said.
Bill Johnson, secretary of the Alliance of Professional Tattooists, agreed
that more extreme and experimental modifications are probably not the best idea.
"My personal view is, it's just too dangerous," said Johnson, whose group
officially takes no position on the practice.
Many modification enthusiasts don't consider all the health ramifications,
experts said. Garcia tells interested people to "think about it, because when
they do need to come out, it's not as easy as putting them in."
But many modifiers say they don't think health or legal hurdles will curb the
trend. They said the drive to be different and creative will keep pushing people
to embrace more extreme modification.
"It's evolving to the point where sometimes I kind of scare myself at
thinking what will be next," Garcia said.