Stuff to know before getting your tongue pierced!
-will it hurt? Yes, it's a piercing. But it won't be as bad as you think. And once it's over you'll be like "oh that was okay!"
-the aftermath of tongue piercings is swelling. Your tongue will be swollen for a few days, which can be annoying and painful, but you can take a painkiller and hold some ice to it.
-aftercare: so your piercer should tell you all this, but I will state it here too. Tongue piercings are a bit different in terms of aftercare. You will need to use alcohol-free mouthwash after every time you eat (but max 5 times per day). This helps keep everything clean!
-healing: tongues and mouths heal remarkably fast. I felt completely back to normal after just two weeks. BUT! You MUST not make out or give oral for 3 months I believe. Your piercer will tell you this.
-how do I eat?: so I didn't have to do like a full liquid diet for a whole week or anything. I started out with mainly liquids, but soft solids are fine too. (Soup, applesauce, smoothies, etc. are good) Take small bites, go slow, chew carefully (do NOT tilt your tongue in a way that positions the ball of your barbell between your teeth. Biting down hard on your jewelry will hurt you!). Just take it slow.
-placement: this is one piercing where you probably won't get a say in placement, because the piercer will be avoiding veins and also avoiding breaking through that little thing that connects the bottom of your tongue to the base of your mouth. As a result, it might be at an angle. But yeah, your piercer is deciding placement
-you will need to brush your tongue. Because stuff can't just scrape right down the middle of your tongue anymore, bacteria will build up. So make brushing your tongue a regular part of brushing your teeth!
-it might feel weird and take some time to get used to the jewelry in your mouth. Also you can't put anything right on the middle of your tongue, cause there's a ball there now!
-watch it carefully while you're healing. Piercers give you a longer bar to accommodate for swelling, but if it looks like the bar could be too small, go back and ask if you need an even longer one. Then, post-swelling, go back and get a shorter one.
-tooth damage: with any type of oral piercing you have to be vigilant of your tooth and gum health. My piercing does not rest on my teeth, or hit my teeth while I'm talking, so I've been fine. But just pay attention. And look at your gums regularly to make sure they aren't receding (on the inside especially).
-go to a professional piercer (I'm not joking, tongue piercings are supremely dangerous if you don't see a professional)
-don't go out and get one right now in the midst of covid. In fact, this is a good time to think about all the piercings you want and decide what you'll get in the future, and make a game plan of what you're gonna do post-covid














