03/17/2026
Yesterday a woman walked in at 4 PM. No appointment. Asked if I could squeeze her in.
âWhat do you want?â I asked.
She showed me a photo on her phone. Numbers. Just numbers.
â392. On my wrist. Simple. Black. Can you do it now?â
I looked at her. Sheâd been crying. Eyes red. Hands shaking.
âYeah, I can do it. But can I ask what 392 means?â
She sat down in my chair. Took a breath.
âItâs the number of days my daughter stayed clean before she overdosed. I found her yesterday. I want to remember she tried. That 392 days mattered.â
I didnât know what to say. Just nodded. Started setting up.
She kept talking. Needed to talk.
âEveryoneâs going to say she relapsed. That she failed. That addicts always relapse. But they wonât say she was sober for 392 days. That she went to meetings. Got a job. Started painting again. That she was my daughter again for 392 days. Theyâll remember one day. The last day. But Iâm going to remember 392.â
Her voice broke.
âThis tattoo is proof those days existed. That she fought. That she almost made it.â
I finished the tattoo. Simple numbers. 392. On her wrist. Where she could see it every day.
She paid. Tipped way too much. Started to leave. Then turned back.
âCan I ask you something weird?â
âAnything,â I said.
âCan you keep that stencil? The 392? And if anyone ever comes in here struggling with addiction. Or losing someone to addiction. Can you offer to do this tattoo for free? Any number. However many days their person stayed clean. 10 days. 100 days. 1 day. I donât care. Just so they know those days counted.â
She left before I could answer.
I kept the 392 stencil. Put it in a frame behind my counter. Wrote under it:
âDays of sobriety tattoos â always free. Any number. Because every day counts.â
I didnât think anyone would take me up on it.
Three days later, a man came in. Saw the sign. Started crying.
âCan you do 1,279?â
âAbsolutely. Whoâs it for?â
âMy brother. He was sober 1,279 days. Died in a car accident last week. Sober driver hit by a drunk driver. The irony is killing me. He fought so hard. And some stranger took him out.â
I did the tattoo for free. He hugged me for five minutes.
Word spread.
Iâve done 23 sobriety number tattoos in three weeks. Free. Every single one. 47 days. 6 days. 1,823 days. 2 days. One woman got â14 hoursâ tattooed.
âMy son stayed clean for 14 hours before he relapsed and died. Everyone says 14 hours doesnât count. But it does. He tried. For 14 hours he tried.â
I tattooed 14 hours on her shoulder. She sobbed the entire time.
When I finished, she looked at it and whispered, âNow everyone will know he tried.â
Yesterday someone came in and asked for â0 days.â
I was confused. âZero?â
He nodded.
âMy daughter never got clean. She tried to quit so many times. Went to rehab four times. But never made it past a few hours before using again. She died at 23. Everyone says she didnât try. But she did. She tried so hard. Zero days sober but a million attempts. Can you tattoo 0 with a little infinity symbol?â
Because her attempts were infinite even if her days werenât.
I cried while doing that tattoo. Zero with an infinity symbol. For a girl who never stopped trying even though she never succeeded.
A teenager came in two days ago. Seventeen years old. With his dad.
âCan you do 91 days? For me. Iâm 91 days sober. I want to remember.â
I looked at his dad. Dad nodded.
âHe asked for this. Iâm proud of him.â
I did the tattoo. 91 on his forearm. When I finished, the kid stared at it.
âNow when I want to use, Iâll see this. Iâll remember I made it to 91. I can make it to 92.â
His dad paid. Tipped $200.
âYouâre saving lives with ink,â he said. âKeep doing this.â
The kid comes back every 30 days. I add a small tally mark next to his 91. Heâs up to 151 days now. Five tally marks. Heâs going to make it.
The original woman came back yesterday. The 392 tattoo.
âI wanted to show you something,â she said.
She pulled up her sleeve. Another number.
â1.â
Just the number 1.
âWhatâs that for?â I asked.
She smiled through tears.
âOne year since my daughter died. One year Iâve survived without her. Someone told me I should get a tattoo for my own sobriety. From grief. From giving up. Iâve been sober from ending my own life for one year. Because of this.â
She pointed to 392.
âEvery time I wanted to give up, I looked at this. If she could fight for 392 days, I could fight for one more. So Iâm marking my days now too. One year. 365 days of choosing to stay.â
I have a wall now. Photos of every sobriety number tattoo Iâve done. 47 tattoos in two months. Numbers ranging from 14 hours to 6,247 days.
Every single one free.
Every single one a story of someone who tried. Who fought. Who stayed clean for as long as they could. Some made it. Some didnât.
But every number matters.
Because addiction isnât about the day someone relapses. Itâs about all the days they didnât.
And those days deserve to be remembered. Marked. Honored.
I started this because a grieving mother asked me to remember 392 days. Now Iâm remembering hundreds of days. Thousands of days. Marking them in ink on the skin of people who refuse to forget.
Every number tells me the same thing:
Trying counts. Fighting counts. Even if you lose, the fight counted.
Iâm a tattoo artist. But these arenât just tattoos. Theyâre monuments. Proof that someone tried. And in a world that only remembers the last day, Iâm making sure we remember all the days before it.