The piercing as a marker of what mattered
Some people get piercings purely for how they look. Others get piercings to remember something a person, a moment, a transition, an achievement, a survival. Memorial and milestone piercings are deliberately commemorative: the wearer attaches specific personal significance to the piercing, often invisible to anyone observing it, and that significance is the primary reason for getting the piercing in the first place.
This guide is for anyone considering a piercing as a way to mark something. It covers how to choose the right piercing for the right commemoration, how to make the meaning genuinely durable rather than fading, and how to think about the piercing as a piece of personal ritual without forcing meaning that isn't authentically there.
Why piercings work as commemorations
Piercings have specific properties that make them well-suited to commemorative purpose:
• Permanent or near-permanent the piercing channel remains for years even if the jewellery changes; the act of having been pierced doesn't reverse
• Embodied — the commemoration lives on your physical body rather than in an object you might lose or misplace
• Self-directed — the act of getting pierced involves consent, choice, and intentionality in ways that mark the moment more deliberately than passive markers
• Invisible signal — the commemorative meaning is often invisible to others, which means it's protected from external interpretation or commentary
• Combined ritual and result the act of getting pierced is itself a ritual (going to the studio, the moment of piercing, the healing process) and the piercing is the lasting result of that ritual
These properties make piercings genuinely meaningful commemorations in ways that other forms of marking (jewellery worn but removable, tattoos that take longer and require more aesthetic commitment) don't fully replicate.
Memorial piercings: commemorating loss
Memorial piercings commemorate someone who has died or something that has ended. Common contexts:
• Death of a parent, partner, child, sibling, or close friend
• End of a significant relationship — divorce, breakup, estrangement
• Loss of a pet who was deeply meaningful
• End of a chapter of life — leaving a city, leaving a profession, leaving a community
• Recovery from an illness or addiction where the recovery also implies the loss of the person you were before
Memorial piercings work best when there's specific intentionality at the moment of piercing. A piercing that 'happens' to be done around the time of a loss may carry less commemorative weight than a piercing explicitly chosen and timed to mark the loss. Some practical considerations:
1. Choose a piercing position that has personal meaning. Common choices for memorial piercings include a single helix on the side of the dominant ear (always visible to you in the mirror), a piercing in a position the deceased had themselves (a daith if your parent had a daith), or a position you specifically discussed with the person before they died.
2. Choose jewellery with material significance. A solid gold piece that you'll keep permanently. A piece in their birthstone. A piece that incorporates a small amount of metal from a piece of theirs (some jewellers will do this with sentimental metal). The jewellery isn't just decoration it's the carrier of the commemoration.
3. Be deliberate about the timing. Many people find that immediately after a loss is too raw — the piercing experience overlays the grief in ways that aren't fully wanted. Common timing patterns include the first anniversary of the loss, after a significant grief milestone (completing a therapy program, scattering ashes), or once the rawness has settled enough that the piercing can be a chosen act rather than a reactive one.
4. Tell someone if you want to. Many people experience their memorial piercings as private; others find that sharing the commemoration with someone close adds to its meaning. There's no right answer but think in advance about whether you want the commemoration witnessed.
Milestone piercings: commemorating achievement and transition
Milestone piercings mark positive events: things completed, things achieved, things transitioned into. Common contexts:
• Completing a degree, training program, or significant educational achievement
• Career milestones — first job, promotion, starting a business, retirement
• Recovery milestones — completing treatment, reaching sobriety anniversaries, surviving a serious illness
• Relationship milestones — engagement (less common for piercings than rings, but it happens), anniversaries, leaving a marriage you needed to leave
• Transition milestones — coming out, gender transition milestones, religious conversion or departure, geographic moves
• Birthday milestones — significant ages (18, 21, 30, 40), with the piercing as a self-given marker
Milestone piercings often work well as deliberate self-gifts. The pattern: I have done [thing], and this piercing is the marker I give myself for having done it. The intentionality of the gift-to-self framing tends to make milestone piercings feel meaningful in ways that piercings without that framing don't.
Recovery and survival piercings
A specific subset of milestone piercings deserves separate mention: piercings that mark recovery from or survival of something difficult. Cancer survival, addiction recovery, mental health crisis recovery, surviving abuse, completing a difficult medical treatment, surviving any of the things that genuinely challenge survival.
Recovery piercings carry distinct characteristics:
• Often very visible to the wearer (positions visible in the mirror) rather than to others the daily reminder is the point
• Frequently chosen at specific recovery anniversaries (one year sober, five years cancer-free, two years past the worst moment)
• Sometimes paired or accumulated additional piercings added at successive milestone anniversaries, creating an archive of survival
• Material often matters more than design solid gold, natural gemstones, pieces with intrinsic value as a statement that the wearer is worth investing in
Transition piercings: gender, identity, and becoming
For many people in transition gender transition, identity transition, or significant personal evolution piercings mark stages of becoming. Common patterns:
• First piercing after starting hormone therapy or other transition medical steps
• Piercings to mark legal or social transitions name change, gender marker change, coming out
• Piercings in positions associated with the gender or identity being moved toward
• Body reclamation piercings the act of intentional body modification as a way of claiming ownership of a body whose relationship to the wearer has been complicated
Transition piercings differ from milestone piercings in that they often mark ongoing processes rather than completed events. Some wearers add piercings at successive transition milestones; others choose a single piercing that marks the broader transition rather than any specific moment.
Making the meaning durable
How to make sure your commemorative piercing keeps meaning years later
The act of piercing is intense and emotionally charged; the years afterward are often not. Many commemorative piercings lose their original meaning over time as the wearer forgets exactly why they got it. Three practices help preserve meaning: write down what you intend the piercing to commemorate at the time of getting it (date, context, what specifically you're marking); keep the original jewellery even if you swap to different pieces later (the first piece carries the commemoration most directly); revisit the meaning at anniversaries the piercing's annual marker becomes part of its function.
When not to get a commemorative piercing
Some commemorative piercings don't end up serving the wearer well. Cases where waiting or choosing differently might be better:
• In the immediate aftermath of acute loss grief often makes everything feel like it needs to be marked; the urgency usually passes within months and clarifies what genuinely deserves commemoration
• When the 'commemoration' is really avoidance getting a piercing as a way of dealing with feelings that you haven't actually processed can leave you with the piercing and the unprocessed feelings
• When you're not actually sure what you want to commemorate vague intentions often produce piercings that feel arbitrary later
• When the piercing position you're choosing is anatomically risky or aesthetically poor the commemoration deserves a piercing you can wear well, not one you'll need to remove
None of these are absolute rules. Many memorial piercings done in acute grief have meant a great deal to their wearers. But the question 'should I wait?' is worth asking before any commemorative piercing and 'yes' is sometimes the right answer.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a memorial piercing?
A memorial piercing is a piercing deliberately chosen to commemorate someone or something that has been lost the death of a person, the end of a relationship, the loss of a pet, the closing of a chapter of life. The piercing is intentional rather than incidental: the wearer chooses the position, jewellery, and timing specifically to mark the loss. The commemorative meaning is often invisible to others, which protects it from external interpretation.
How do I choose a memorial piercing position?
Several approaches work well: choose a position visible to you in the mirror (so the commemoration is a daily reminder), choose a position the person you're memorialising had themselves (matching their piercings), or choose a position you specifically associate with them through conversations or shared experience. The position should be one you're willing to wear for the long term memorial piercings work best when they're permanent, so the piercing has to suit you anatomically and aesthetically as well as commemoratively.
Should I get a memorial piercing immediately after a loss?
Often it's worth waiting. The immediate aftermath of acute loss is often overwhelming, and getting a piercing in that state can layer the piercing experience over raw grief in ways that aren't always wanted. Many people find that waiting until the first anniversary of the loss, or until after a significant grief milestone, produces a piercing they feel better about long-term. There are no universal rules some memorial piercings done immediately have meant a great deal but the question 'should I wait?' is worth asking before proceeding.
What's a milestone piercing?
A milestone piercing marks a positive event: a completed achievement, a successful transition, a survived challenge, a significant birthday. The piercing functions as a deliberate self-gift, commemorating the event by giving yourself something permanent. Milestone piercings often work well at specific anniversaries (completion of a degree, sobriety anniversaries, transition milestones) and tend to feel meaningful when the intentional framing is clear: 'I have done this thing, and this piercing is how I mark it.'
How can I make sure my commemorative piercing keeps meaning over time?
Three practices help: write down what the piercing commemorates at the time of getting it (date, context, what specifically you're marking) so you have an explicit record; keep the original jewellery even if you swap to different pieces later (the first piece carries the commemoration most directly); revisit the meaning at anniversaries the annual marker becomes part of the piercing's function. Many commemorative piercings lose their original meaning over time without these practices, becoming just piercings rather than meaningful markers.
Can I get multiple piercings to commemorate multiple events?
Yes, and many people build their piercing collection this way over years. Successive milestone piercings can create an accumulating archive each piercing marking a different event, the collection as a whole telling a story. Recovery anniversary piercings are a common pattern (one piercing at each significant recovery milestone). The accumulated set can carry combined meaning more powerful than any individual piercing alone.
What jewellery is best for a memorial or milestone piercing?
Solid gold (14k or 18k) is the most common choice for commemorative piercings because it has material durability, doesn't fade, and carries inherent value that reinforces the importance of what's being commemorated. Pieces with the person's birthstone, with a small natural gemstone of personal meaning, or made from sentimental metal (some jewellers will incorporate a small amount of metal from a piece belonging to the person being memorialised) carry additional meaning. The jewellery should be material you're willing to keep permanently this is one case where the long-term investment in solid material is genuinely justified.