The mark is not random.
For years, people have hidden it, lied about it, or felt quietly ashamed of it. Some were told it meant they were poor,
unclean, or from “backward” places. Others assumed it was a childhood accident or a botched injection.
But that small, round scar on the upper arm carr… Continues…
That small, round scar is not a mistake, a stigma, or a sign of neglect. It is the lasting imprint of the BCG vaccine,
a deliberate encounter between your immune system and a weakened cousin of the tuberculosis bacteria.
The blister, the ulcer, the slow healing—none of it meant failure. It meant your body was learning,
recording, and preparing to defend you.
Far from being a mark of poverty, the BCG scar reflects public health choices made in countries w
here tuberculosis once stole countless lives, regardless of class or status. Some people never develop a visible scar;
others carry a deep, sunken circle for life. Neither outcome defines their worth, nor accurately measures their immunity.
The scar is harmless, stable, and medically insignificant—yet emotionally powerful. When understood, it becomes less a
blemish and more a quiet badge of survival, science, and shared global history.