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Wednesday, 30 January 2013

15 Top Reasons to Be Naked


Defining Voyeurism :: Human sexual behavior involving achievement of sexual arousal through viewing the sexual activities of others or through watching others disrobe. To some extent voyeurism is widespread; various types of sexual display are a normal part of sexual attraction and mating behavior in most animals, including humans, but voyeurism is considered a deviant behavior when observation ceases to be merely one factor in sexual attraction and becomes the sole or primary source of gratification. The risk of being caught is an additional element in the excitement of the voyeur.

The following was written by a young member of the Federation of Canadian Naturists. It is used with their permission.

15 Top Reasons to Be Naked
1. It's fun! Of course, it's not for everyone, but then, neither is Madonna nor the Red Hot Chili Peppers, NBA basketball nor Batman. But once most young couples and boyfriends/girlfriends try it, they come back. Why? Because it's fun. You probably know people who have vacationed at nude beaches, who skinny-dip in their backyard pool or who lounge around the house nude. Why not?

2. It's healthy! Besides improved self-esteem, the sun relieves stress, provides you with Vitamin D, a tan with SPF 4 protection and helps clear acne. Naturists don't overdo their time in the sun; they tan safely with a sunscreen.

3. It feels good! You know how gross those jeans and bra straps feel on a hot sticky day? Or that wet swimsuit when you come out of the water! No more! Trade it in for the feeling of wind on your back and the sun on your body! Cool!

4. Self-esteem! You'll feel great about yourself! Nudity helps you become more open and accept yourself for whom you are, not whether you measure up to the supermodels you see in ads. Welcome to a place that does not measure value as a human being by body size! It makes you a stronger, more confident person.

5. Be yourself! You can express your individuality! Everyone accepts you as you are, whether you have a disability, are overweight, dyed your hair purple, or have a great tattoo that your friends hate. People are attracted by your personality! Everybody's different, and that is respected!

6. So much to do! Volleyball, swimming, basketball, suntanning, golf, tennis, and all sorts of other activities. There is just about anything youd do at any campground or beach. Only more.

7. You are in full control! You decide when you arrive and leave. You decide what to do when you are there! Just like if you went to the beach. But better! If its your first visit, you decide when or even if you want to disrobe! Its normal to feel apprehensive on your first visit, but since you're in control, you have nothing to lose by checking it out!

8. You can be you! It's so refreshing to be someplace where nudity is not sex, unlike ads, movies or TV. You don't have to look like an actor or actress from Baywatch! Nobody's staring to see if you have a great body or if you're overweight or too thin! Nobody is checking you out at all! It doesn't matter if your belly button is an inny or an outy! It's OK!

9. No sex! Everyone in a nudist park is having an orgy? NOT! That is Myth # 1! (People who think nudity is about sex find it a lot more convenient to go to strip bars. Besides, the naturist resort owners don't let those people in anyways.) Lewd behaviour is NOT allowed. Ever!

10. Safety! You're in a no-jerks zone! People treat you the way you want to be treated. Problems are taken care of right away, especially for women, so they don't feel vulnerable. You won't run into problems like at public beaches where people stare at bathing suits, giving their imaginations free reign.

11. Popularity and confidentiality! You'll be part of the group! Already, thousands of Canadians are nudists. But nudism is totally confidential, so nobody knows. Naturist parks are in discreet, strictly private areas, well back from roads. Those who go accept newcomers anonymity. All naturists respect confidentiality. The only people who know you enjoy nudism are those you tell. And if you meet someone at a resort you know, don't worry about it. They're there for the same reasons as you, to have fun.

12. Skinny-dipping! All those University of British Columbia students can't be wrong! You've heard about all those great topless and nude beaches elsewhere in the world, Europe, the Caribbean, Florida. But North America's second-largest nude beach is Vancouver's Wreck Beach, just at the base of a cliff on the edge of the University of British Columbia. On a hot summer day you'll find 12,000 nude people (UBC students wouldn't cut class, would they?)! There are smaller nude beaches in every province in Canada.

13. It doesn't cost a lot! You don't put out the big bucks for a fun time.

14. It's Natural! If people were meant to go naked, they would have been born that way!!!

15. No tan lines! BONUS! 

Five Myths About Nude Vacations


    As a college student hiking through the French Alps many years ago, I accidentally uncovered one hotel’s shocking secret.

I didn’t mean to reveal it. It was a blistering hot day in Grenoble, and my traveling companion, Nate, wandered toward a swimming pool behind the resort while I stocked up on water and provisions. Moments later he returned, pale-faced. “Chris,” he said breathlessly, pointing toward the pool. “There are breasts in there.”

Yes, there were. The French, like many Europeans, generally think nothing of baring breasts, butt — and more — at the beach, much to the surprise of visiting Yanks. I already knew this, because I had grown up in Europe. But my friend Nate, who was born and raised in the Bible Belt, didn’t. Nudity! There, I said it. If the thought of going au naturel on holiday makes you uncomfortable, please don’t read on. You’ll probably be offended.

Still with me? OK, here are the five leading myths about nude vacations.

Five Myths About  Nude Vacations
1. Vacationing nudists are just a bunch of perverts. Hardly. In fact, nudists are everyday people, and there are more of them out there than you think. The American Association for Nude Recreation (AANR), the largest organization of its kind in North America, represents nearly 180,980 members and their families. There are also 270 clubs and resorts for people who want to vacation in the buff — and that’s just in prim-and-proper North America.

2. Clothing-optional resorts are seedy. Nope. We’re talking about mainstream, professionally run properties offering a wide range of wholesome activities. Among them: Cypress Cove Nudist Resort & Spa in Kissimmee, Fla., which has villas and campgrounds, and even sponsors its own nude bike rally every year. (Its motto: “Just as nature intended.”) And DeAnza Springs Resort in Jacumba, Calif., a 500-acre club with hiking trails, volleyball courts and swimming pools. (“You’ll love the way you feel,” it promises, “We guarantee it.”)

3. You have to take your clothes off at a nudist resort. Not necessarily. There’s a difference between a clothing-optional club and a clothes-free resort. Clothing-optional means that you can keep your clothes on if you want to - the idea being that it sometimes takes a little time to adjust to nudity (in fact, even devoted nudists sometimes keep their pants on). However, a clothes-free club means a mandatory strip-down. Knowing the difference is important when it’s your first time at a nudist resort. The AANR suggests contacting a club in advance to clarify its policies.

4. Nudists are mostly senior citizens who are off their rockers. Actually, most clothing-optional and nudist resorts are extremely family-friendly. For example, at the White Thorn Lodge, in western Pennsylvania, there are a number of activities for the whole family, including volleyball, bocci, pumpkin painting, a Christmas social with Santa, and a potluck dinner (“Meat provided, bring a side dish to share”).

OK, so there are some nudist resorts where you’re likely to find a disproportionately high number of, well, older folks. But as nudism goes more mainstream, a lot of families are embracing the movement. In fact, my former neighbors were nudists. Both parents would hang out in their backyard sans clothes with their two teenage daughters.

5. Nudists are exhibitionists who want to seduce you. Trust me, for most people, the odds of getting a date are greatly improved if they keep their clothes on. And seriously, how long do you think anyone with criminal intentions would last at a nudist resort? So why do people vacation in the buff? Well, often it’s because they don’t want a tan line. They’re not exposing their bodies to you as much as they are to the sun.

        The idea of taking a vacation in your birthday suit may take some getting used to. But nudists aren’t deviant septuagenarians and their resorts aren’t sleazy hideaways. The truth is, nudists are often the people next door, and if nothing else, a nude vacation can lead to many new discoveries.

  Nate’s encounter with the topless French women apparently left a deep impression on him. Several short years later, he got married and he is now the father of eight children.

And me? I’m looking forward to my next trip to Europe.

Me and my husband would like to go to a nude beach or a nudist resort, but we aren't sure if we should bring our children.  Have you seen any families where you go?

Naturism is a wonderful family activity and is extremely healthy for children.  Me and my husband often visit nudist beaches... nudist clubs... and nudist resorts where we always see and meet great  children ranging from infants to teenagers.  They play together nude and enjoy the beach or resort facilities just as children do anywhere else... having a fantastic time together.  If you want to learn to be a nudist just watch the children... and just like with operating a computer... they will show you the way..!  If you are unsure... contact or research your destination before you arrive.  The Diablo Sun Devils for example... is a family oriented singles and couples club... and children are welcome at many of our nudist events.

Nude Sunbathing

Nude Sunbathing
Most sunbathers think nude sunbathing is perfectly natural and don't mind crossing paths with bottomless beach-goers -- even when those bottoms are unsightly, survey results released Sunday said. While topless sunbathing is widely practiced in Italy, bottoms are usually required and nudists can face fines of more than 500 euros ($595) on some beaches, the Italian Naturalist Federation said. But the federation said a poll it commissioned from a mainstream media outlet found nearly 70 percent of those surveyed said they would sunbath nude if everyone else did it.
More than 80 percent said nudism was not erotic, but natural. Women were more frequently bothered by nude sunbathing than men. Just over 40 percent of women said they did not like seeing other naked females on the beach, while just 5 percent of men shared their opinion about nude women. The survey found nearly two-thirds of men said they weren't bothered by nude male sunbathers. When it came to unattractive or "brutto" sunbathers, most of those surveyed in the country that champions physical beauty said they didn't object to seeing them naked either. Only about 16 percent said they were vexed by unattractive women nudists and 9.7 percent objected to unsightly men. The Federation said the survey would bolster their hopes of getting more beaches set aside for nude sunbathing.

Sunbathing nude prevents those nasty tan lines and allows the entire body to benefit from the positive effects of the sun!

NO TAN IS A HEALTHY TAN, say most dermatologists. They cite dozens of studies that link sun exposure to premature wrinkles, cataracts, and skin cancer. To prevent these problems, some recommend that you avoid the sun as much as possible and slather on sunscreen whenever you go out, even if you're only going out for a few minutes. But the sun doesn't just have a dark side. "Anybody who tells you you're supposed to wear sunscreen in the winter all day every day, even in the office, hasn't looked at the data," says Marianne Berwick, Ph.D., a researcher and epidemiologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. In fact, research shows that sun exposure is necessary for good health; it boosts your mood, strengthens your bones, and may lower your risk for certain cancers, among other benefits.

The sun helps your body make vitamin D, and you can thank this nutrient for most of the sun's health benefits. You can get vitamin D by eating foods like fortified milk and fatty fish and by taking supplements. But many experts believe the sun is a better source of D because your body may not absorb an adequate amount of this nutrient from foods or supplements. But you won't get enough vitamin D if you go out in the sun wearing sunscreen.

Nudism Naturism & My Teen Age Life


When I was 9 years old and a fourth grader at Lowrey Elementary School in Dearborn, Michigan, my class began to have regular physical education classes taught by a special P.E. teacher rather than by our regular classroom teacher. And since our school had an indoor swimming pool, we had swimming classes as part of the P.E. program. For these classes--separate classes for boys and girls--boys were required to swim nude. We heard that girls wore regulation "tank suits." Day after day 80-90 naked boys in a single swim class would tussle and push, shove, and kid around by the pool and race, play water polo, and enjoy "free play" in the warm water.

It was the same story throughout the remainder of public schools through the 12th grade, in an intermediate swimming class and senior lifesaving class I took at the University of Michigan, and during free swims in the men's pools at Harvard and Princeton. During an intramural swim meet, attended only by males, in which I participated with my undergraduate college dormitory, some of the men, including me, swam the races nude. In the pool at the Michigan Men's Union, swimming was typically nude. The same was true at YMCA pools of the period. At many pools men were required to swim nude; at others swimsuits were optional.

All of that changed when physical education became coeducational and athletic facilities at YMCAs and YWCAs, on college and university campuses, and in public schools were opened to both men and women. With coeducation nude recreation ended. Today one newspaper reports that boys, who in my generation were required to take group showers after every gym class, now rarely shower together. Even football players apparently wear their uniforms home after a game rather than undress and shower in front of team-mates. Another newspaper reports that boys' participation on swim teams has declined because of their objection to wearing brief Speedo swim suits.  Men's swimsuits have become big baggy pants that hang dripping and heavy about the body like some penalty exacted for an unnamed crime. But I carry in me the imprint of 20 years or more of nude swimming. I liked it. I liked the feeling of the water on my body, the feeling of freedom floating unencumbered in the swell. I have always resented swimsuits, uncomfortable, wet, cold, awkward.

When we moved to Oakland 30 years ago, our family enjoyed Stinson Beach in Marin County, a huge, sandy strand. We liked to hike along the surf from the north end to the south. At the south end are piles of huge rocks blocking the pathway, but it was possible to clamber in, around, and over the rocks and onto a rock-strewn smaller beach just to the south. And at low tide one could walk even farther to the south, around a rocky cliff jutting out into the ocean. One day during a particularly low tide I followed that route around the cliff and found myself at the end of a small cove with its own sandy beach nestled against the rocks. It was filled with nude sunbathers. I had discovered "Red Rock," one of California's famed "free" or "clothing optional" beaches. Men and women of all ages, from young adults to graying retirees--singles, couples, families, friends--and a few children, were sunning themselves, playing frisbee, joining in card games, reading, splashing in the surf. They were jammed much closer in this small cove than the sunbathers at Stinson Beach, but they seemed more like a community of people enjoying one another's company than the isolated families or friendship groups set apart on their distant towels at Stinson.

I felt out of place there in my suit, so I thought, "Well, here goes nothing," and I whipped off my suit, stuck it in a hole in the rocky cliff, and enjoyed some time naked in the sun, surf, and sand before re-suiting and rejoining my family up on what I learned later to call the "textile" beach. I initially felt excitement, but neither arousal nor embarrassment or shame, and, as I got used to being in the open nude among dozens of other nude beach folk, I felt happy, pleasant, peaceful. I enjoyed the feel of the sun, air, and surf unimpeded against my body.

With that experience I decided I wanted to learn more about these people and this experience. I began to return to Red Rock Beach and soon after learned--it must have been in the annual nude beach edition of The San Francisco Guardian--where other such clothing-optional beaches were located and visited them too. I joined The Naturist Society and, for a time, belonged to the American Sunbathing Association, now renamed the American Association for Nude Recreation and read their journals. I discovered and subscribed to Naturist Life International, published by a rigorous and somewhat conservative Catholic layperson, who has established a home in rural Vermont, where he and his wife raise (and homeschool) their five children almost wholly without clothes. There are two nudist resorts in the immediate San Francisco bay area, Lupin Naturist Club, off of highway 17 between San Jose and Santa Cruz, and Sequoians Clothes Free Club, at the end of Cull Canyon Road just north of Castro Valley, and I have visited both.

What I have discovered is a congenial, wholesome, hospitable, altogether "normal" group of people who are like all other people except that they have grown to be comfortable, to thrive, and to prefer dispensing with clothing when the setting permits it--in their homes, on clothing optional beaches and remote hiking trails, and at nudist and clothing-optional resorts. At Red Rock Beach, Lupin, and The Sequoians I have happened upon people I knew elsewhere--students from the seminary at which I teach, a psychotherapist colleague, a graphics designer who has provided me designs for continuing education advertising, a Graduate Theological Union administrator. I have met interesting people who in their textile lives are computer engineers, a museum curator, freelance artists, stock brokers, students, military, other clergy, all sorts and conditions.

Nude Runs and Public Exposure


Running nude is exhilarating. It remains exhilarating even when running nude in a race where most of the participants remain clothed. While running I am much cooler than the others and when I get dressed after the race and walk the cool down, I am very comfortable as my stuff is clean and dry. It is also a way to show people that nudity does not equal sex and that nude is not lewd.

Sadly, there are those who will never understand this. During the Bay to Breakers run we would encourage others to join us. We got a retort from two ladies who fully expected that if they were to run in the nude there would be an orgy at the finish line rather than people get dressed and go their own way.

Thousands watched as I walked from one side of San Francisco to the other, naked except for my hiking shoes, socks, a hat, and my backpack. I was accompanied by other Camping Bares, 2 nude women, 5 other nude men, and thousands of people draped in various textiles. I'm told that throughout the throng was a total of 40 nude runners and walkers, at least 6 of them were women. This was the annual San Francisco 'Bay to Breakers' race, but for me it was the 'Bare to Breakers' stroll, and for the 'back of the pack' it is more a parade than a race.

The throngs gathered Sunday morning just a few blocks from the Oakland Bridge. A group of us met and circumvented the crowd by taking a side street to some barricades. There we waited for the serious runners to pass, then the barricades were moved, we stripped down, took a few group photos, and entered the mass of people moving down the street.

Most of the time I didn't even think about the fact that I had no clothes on. As we walked past spectators lining the race course, we were cheered and encouraged by the onlookers as they shouted 'hey naked people' and waved. Many other participants also encouraged us, quite a few commented that they wished they had the guts to join us. Two people, one male and one female, who had started the race clothed, did strip down and join us as we crossed the city. Of the thousands of people involved, I only heard negative comments from about 4 or 5.

To my surprise, the naked men were very popular with women participants. I lost count of the number of women that came up to our group and asked us to pose with them. I have no idea how many 'family' scrapbooks will now have a picture of me standing there naked next to someone's mom, sister, wife, girlfriend, aunt or grandmother. I certainly enjoyed the attention.

It had been warm and sunny on the Bay side of S.F., but as we crossed over the hill and entered Golden Gate Park, we started to cool off as the Ocean breeze caught up to us. Some of the naked people choose to cover up, but most of us pressed on towards the finish line, still wearing only our Camping Bares uniform.

The group I was in had been delayed by all the stops for photo opportunities and a couple of lengthy pit stops. We arrived at the Pacific Coast Highway just under four hours after we had started the event.

By then, most of the throng had dissipated, we could see the finish line just 100 feet off to our left, across the street was the beach and Pacific Ocean, and standing right in front of us were two San Francisco police officers. One of them decided it was time for us to put our clothes on. I asked if I could at least finish the race the way I started, but was told no. We had passed many police officers on the route, none had commented on the nudity, but for these two, the race was over. We complied, put our clothes on, and made it through the finish gate just as the big 'FINISH LINE' banner was being taken down.

This was a fantastic event. It was fun. I felt I made a statement about body acceptance, self-determination and freedom. I will be back, and I will start and finish completely nude. I'm even threatening to get in good even physical condition to actually try running the race. I hope everyone that reads this will join me, at least in spirit, if not there au naturel.

Thanks to Les Dearing for introducing me to this event, it was a blast.

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Social Nudity in Modern European and American Cultures


How popular is nudism in the world today?

Very popular... and growing much more popular among women each and every day.  Lets face it... women are the beautiful and attractive part of our human species... and men love looking at us.  Women really do enjoy showing off their bodies... and why shouldn't we... it is very normal and natural... and it feels good... that is just how it is and how it has always been..!  In my country all of the beaches are clothing optional and have been for hundreds and hundreds of years.  Today the nations of Australia, Austria, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Jamaica, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Scotland, the USSR, Yugoslavia, and many, many others have officially designated clothing optional beaches.  Countries that do not have officially designated clothing optional areas due to a high level of body shame are Mexico, China, and nearly all of the Muslim countries such as Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan along with many others... and believe this or not... the United States of America... the land of the free..!

Poll after poll shows a very positive acceptance of nudism and naturism here in the United States as well as around the world.  Being naked is actually fast becoming the thing to do everywhere... from snow skiing to walking the beach.  The truth is... it is simply fun and it really is quite normal and natural..!  But... even though the public clearly accepts and wants nudism... our government continues to reflect a view more in line with the Victorian Church of England.  Although there are a number of clothing optional beaches and other places in the United States today... none have official designation and under Federal Law you are always subject to arrest for indecent exposure..!

Before the Judeo-Christian-Moslem concept of body shame... most of the tropical and temperate world was one big nudist camp.  Greeks and Romans wore clothing when necessary or for certain social functions... but bathing and sports were openly enjoyed while naked.  As exhibited by their sculpture and ceramics... the Greeks revered youth and physical fitness.  To them the body was truly a work of divinity to be admired in its entirety.  The Olympics were an offering of the best young athletes... unencumbered by restrictive and concealing clothes.  Gymnos... or naked... was how the athlete trained and competed.

But... all things must pass.  With the crumbling of the ancient civilizations and the emergence of a new religion which stressed the sinfulness of sensuality... Europe entered the dark ages of body shame..!

One such group of Christians were the Puritans... the 16th century Protestants opposed to the religious intolerance of the Church of England.  In their exile to New England they became the anti-pleasure... moralizing... Paulists we associate with Puritanism.

The Puritans were so fearful of exciting lust that they disdained bathing because it promoted nudity.  Many American Protestants who decry public nudity... conveniently ignore the fact that Jesus was naked at his baptism.

Back in Europe... the Renaissance had reawakened the body-acceptance and art of the ancients.  Humanism and the celebration of the body were back... and even the reluctant Church had to accept the idea that God created man in his own image... and thought the work looked good.

As Europe progressed through the Renaissance... America remained entrenched in a mindset of religiously dictated morality that would define its mainstream culture for centuries.  There were progressive thinkers... such as Benjamin Franklin and Henry David Thoreau... who saw health benefit in their daily naked walks... or "air baths"... but they were the minority.

By the turn of the 20th century... mainland Europe was far more tolerant of sensuality and body acceptance than the United States.  Works of art and literature that were acceptable there were routinely banned in the United States...  such as the oil painting "September Morn" by French artist Paul Chabas.  This innocent nude bather was deemed obscene by Anthony Comstock of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.

Naked Culture

While the United States was banning pictures of naked bathers... the first nudists were stripping themselves of the Victorian era prudery and bathing naked in Freilichtpark (free light park) in Lubeck, Germany (1903 - 1981). Nacktkultur... the German nudism... stressed naked healthful living... which included daily bathing and women could socialize together nude without being lewd... the concept of nudism got national exposure..!

In 1933... the International Nudist Conference was formed... which would later become the American Sunbathing Association... and by the mid 1930s there were eighty-one nudist resorts across America.  Most nudist resorts... to some degree... still followed the philosophy of nudism as part of a healthy regimen... and organized nudism was selective of who could be members of the "landed clubs."

The Generation Gap

Organized Nudism... the American Sunbathing Association... and landed clubs became the establishment.  The rebellious youth of the 1960s weren't about to go behind the walls of a nudist cloister.  A new free light and free love culture... based on an honest body acceptance... asked why we didn't do it in the road.  Acceptance of the nude body was only natural... and young people across Europe and America experienced the freedom of being nude at the beach... in the stream or wilderness... or on their back porch or sundeck.  Often called "The Free Beach Movement" in the seventies... it was a philosophy of open nudism that would be called naturism.

Because they escaped our history of overbearing religious prudery... mainland Europeans have enjoyed more personal freedoms than Americans.  For years most European tourist beaches have allowed top free bathing for women.  Nude beaches are now common and popular throughout the continent... including Eastern Europe and in Bulgaria where I come from.

Modern nudism began in Germany and France.  France now has a nudist resort city... Cap d'Agde... on the Mediterranean.  Since the early seventies... Denmark and the Netherlands have become quite accepting of nudity in general... and there have been nudist activities on city streets and parks of both countries.  All but two of Denmark's beaches are clothing optional.

In 1980... TNS... The Naturist Society... was formed in the United States to provide information and support for the free beach and other naturist groups around the country.  The Naturist Action Committee monitors and assists in the ongoing nationwide struggle to keep clothing optional beaches and recreational areas from being closed by the narrow-minded fanatics who still echo Comstock's 19th century prudery.

National opinion polls in 1983 and 1990 revealed that 72% of Americans approve of designated clothing optional beaches.  To date... over 30 million Americans have experienced mixed social nudity.  With the growing number of naturists here... and tourists from Europe... many States have established clothing optional beach's... and with any luck we will have many more in the future..!

What Are The Characteristics of A Nudist Club?


It really does depend on where you go.... but the atmosphere of most nudists clubs and resorts is fun... wholesome... joyous... exciting and very friendly..!  People enjoy everyday activities such as swimming... hot tubing... walking... hiking... cycling... tennis... pool... fishing... jogging... body building... volleyball... sun bathing... socializing and even dinning in a nice restaurant or having a cocktail and dancing with friends... all in the nude..! It is truly a wonderful experience for a woman to do any and all of these things without being encumbered by clothing... and it is my hope that you will all have the opportunity to try it one day soon and see just how much more womanly and alive you feel.  Most clubs have people who arrange activities and events much like any nice resort... and anyone who seems to be there for the wrong reason will be told to leave in very short order.  There are many great nudist clubs... go try one and see for yourself..!

How will I feel on the first visit to a nudist club?

You will probably feel like nearly all of us... a little apprehensive and nervous at first... and then after a few minutes you will feel wonderful..!  Allot depends on the club and it's members I think... in our Sun Devil group and the places we visit you will always find very friendly people of all ages enjoying nude recreation in a fun and secure atmosphere. And of course... there is me... always your happy smiling Sun Devil to make you feel relaxed...comfortable... and very normal being nude.  As a Sun Devil you are accepted for who you are inside... and you will soon learn that any woman who allows herself the personal freedom to enjoy social nudism quickly develops a healthy body image and has a great deal of self-esteem. Nearly all of the women... as well as many young ladies and even some gentleman who have ever joined us at one of our events has taken the time to tell me that they felt very comfortable after only a few minutes..!

Who is the naturist society?

The Naturist Society - (TNS) is a national organization with members having a common philosophy... the acceptance of the nude body as good and that we all have the right to express that belief in an appropriate... natural and non-sexual setting. A government mandate to is a mandate to wear a symbol of shame... especially for women..! Within this context... we view anti nudity laws as laws designed to perpetuate contempt for our bodies.  They impose shame and disgrace and contribute to a feeling of poor body image and lack of self acceptance.  We strongly encourage all Sun Devils... and all nudists or naturists to become members of The Naturist Society. Anything that we can all do to help promote the natural joys and health benefits of nudism helps us all..!

Are you a nudist or a naturist... and what is the difference?

I am a nudist... like everyone else who enjoys social nudism today.  I enjoy being nude and natural... and I also enjoy my sexuality... which are beautiful and positive attributes in my opinion.  If you asked my husband... he would tell you that I am just like other women... and I am confident enough to allow myself the freedom to enjoy my femininity and womanhood..!

Being nude is but a very small part of a naturists life... everything for them must be completely natural... from the air they breath to the water they drink.  Most exist in the mountains far away from society and live in cabins they have built by hand using only natural materials from the surrounding area.  They will only drink from a natural spring... eat only what they have grown or raised... and wouldn't dream of eating processed food of any kind from a grocery store..!  A real naturist does not use electricity... telephone... or any other modern convenience for that matter.  They are usually nude because it is natural.  If they must wear clothing to be accepted somewhere... it would be handmade and only of natural fibers and never washed in anything other than spring water.  You get the idea... and in our modern world you could probably count all of the true naturists on one hand..!

Unfortunately... many people today call themselves a "naturist" as it is a kinder and gentler way of saying "nudist"..!  So what is the difference..?  Today there really is no difference... however I will say this... we were all born nude and we are all nudists to one degree or another.  I despise people calling nudism a lifestyle... it is simply a very important part of life itself..!  So once again I will tell you... if you must give me a title other than a woman... I am a "nudist"... and I am certainly not ashamed to say it just that way..! 

Monday, 28 January 2013

What the Kids Think About Nudism


What the Kids Think About Nudism


Young children couldn't care less, so long as they have a good time!

Primary and teenage children become more concerned about what their peers may think as they get older. Explaining about confidentiality at this point will both help to reassure them, and also help to make them aware of the need for discretion. It can be pointed out that it is up to them as to what they tell their friends, because nobody else will. The presence of other kids at the swim in their own age group becomes increasingly important to them, and will also help to reassure them.

The following is the normal reaction from primary age children, although some will want to wear a costume, at least to begin with.

    ... well I don't have children, so it has never been a problem, however we are god-parents to two children and they have at times stayed with us. One of the weekends we were going to a local swim, and asked the parents if they had any problem of us taking the children along. Both parents had shown some interest in naturism, but had never gone any further because he was concerned about 'his reaction' in a naturist environment. We just told the kids, 8 and 10, that we were going swimming in the evening, but where we swam no-one wore a costume. They did ask if they could keep theirs on, and we said we would ask. When we got there we went into the changing room and stripped off and said to the kids, 'come on, get undressed', no mention about wearing their costumes they stripped off and were soon playing with the other kids. At the end they asked if they could do it again.

Children and Discretion

Older children know the difference, but are not keen to tell anyone who won't understand, for their own reasons. Younger children probably won't even realise there is anything special to report! However, there is no absolute certainty about this, especially if there are problems between members of the family, particularly between teenagers and parents.

One respondent wrote:

    Again, the least said the better. In conversation with parents it never ceases to amaze me how quick children appear to be in developing a sixth sense in this matter. You see the same with bi-lingual kids, they always get it right when it comes to speaking the appropriate language when in company and they never mix languages.

    Peer pressure and "Street Cred" are of course complicating factors but they usually result in kids going erring on the side of discretion rather than the other way round. Bear in mind too that "tan-lines" often loom large on their horizons. How can you show off a sun tan if you haven't got some white bits in contrast.

and another commented:

    ... in my opinion there's absolutely no need to worry about this one. Which doesn't stop people worrying, but may give some reassurance.

    OK, so kids can really enjoy putting a parent on the spot with an embarrassing remark during a visit to doting grandparents, and regarding at least some aspects of parental attitudes and activities as appalling when chatting to one's mates is essential. But children seem to develop extremely acute sensitivities about what they can/can't should/shouldn't say in various situations. If social nudity is frowned on by their peers, they will probably frown on it to those peers - whether they enjoy it for themselves or not.

A member of the Naturist Foundation wrote:

    Most of the kids at the Naturist Foundation over about 8 yo have been told that there are places where it's best not to mention the club, or just to mention that we have caravans there. AFAIK they were simply told that "not everybody agrees with naturism, so we don't tell everyone."

Of course, for the "avoid embarrassment" factor to work, the parent must play their part too, and not chatter happily to a child's friends (etc) about things the child doesn't want those folk to know.

Several years ago, Channel 4 broadcast a shortish play called "The Spy Who Caught A Cold", about a young girl going on a naturist holiday with her Mum. Both had a good time. Over the closing credits, the youngster is chatting with a friend about the holiday, and being emphatic that she certainly hadn't been nude. Which, of course, she had. It rang very true.

And another contribution was:

    I know of a family who have two daughters who always used to come to our Tuesday swim. They also went to many of the other local venues such as Doncaster Dome, the youngest one (about 12) did seem to tag along with me, and I did have some misgivings about what her parents might think, however they had no problems, and I think sometimes were happy to have someone else 'child sitting' especially in the water race part of the Dome, where this girl was not allowed without adult supervision.

    One time, about a week or so after a Dome evening she told me she had had to draw a picture of what she had done at the weekend. She had chosen to draw a picture of us showering at the end of the evening, but she did say, 'I put swimming costumes on all of us'. She was fully aware that her lifestyle might not be understood by others at school, and just altered details slightly so as not to give herself problems with her peers.

Children's Friends

It's possible that a child who enjoys family naturism, including swim sessions, might suggest that a friend comes along. At that point it may be necessary to talk about the fact that some people think naturism isn't a Good Thing at all, and that the friend and/or the friend's parents might be such people. It's probably best to follow your instincts on that.

I have heard of one instance of this happening with older primary children. The friends didn't go to the swim, but the naturist children were perceived as being braver than them.

CCBN child protection guidelines also suggest that great care is needed (ideally written permission) if the child is not with parents/grandparents/guardian

Social Issues in Regards to Voyeur Nudity

Social Issues in Regards to  Voyeur Nudity


Nudity Shame (voyeur nudity)

Centuries of oppressive thought have convinced many people that the body is a shameful, worthless object that should be hidden. Nonsense! The human body is one of the most elegant, masterful and valuable things on earth. There are few things in existence which compare to it on an artistic, technical, or philosophical level. Celebrate the human body! It's one of only a handful of truly unique creations.

Embarrassment (voyeur nudity)

Some people are afraid of running into someone they know while nude, or - worse - being seen by someone they know (or someone they don't) while nude. Remember that you will be around many other people who will also be nude. You may be momentarily embarrassed at first - this is normal - but as you spend more time nude, you will realize that if everyone is nude, no one has cause for nudity-related embarrassment. As for the possibility that you'll run into someone you know - well, if you like them, you've got something new in common to talk about? Besides, what is there to be embarrassed about? They are there, too, for the same reasons as you.

Gender-Specific Embarrassment (voyeur nudity)

Naturists know that both erections and menstruation are normal, so don't be afraid that your body's natural occurrences will offend other naturists. An erection is embarrassing, but rare, and easy to hide - just grab a towel, roll over, or jump in the water. Most naturists won't even comment about it. (Don't fear the erection your first time - most men will tell you they were too nervous for it to even be possible!) Women may feel uncomfortable being nude during menstruation. No one will be offended if women choose to wear shorts, tampons, etc. during these times.

Feelings of Inadequacy (voyeur nudity)

Many people refuse to go nude because they feel that their height, weight, build, features, etc. are unacceptable. There is no need to feel that you must conform to a standard of beauty or acceptability, especially one you had no part in creating! Naturists come in all shapes, sizes, colors, ages, and beliefs. Naturists have even undergone surgeries, mastectomies, etc., and have the scars to prove it (many have said that naturism helped them further accept these scars.) In naturism, there is no ideal of the perfect body other than yourself. If you can accept yourself for what you are, you will have no problem overcoming your perceived imperfections.

Vulnerability (voyeur nudity)

By stripping away clothing, you strip away the armor that protects you from an unkind world. Some people fear this. Naturists believe vulnerability is a good thing. Think about this: in a naturist setting, everybody is vulnerable. The shared vulnerability creates respect and caring for your fellow naturists. Besides, most of your vulnerability probably comes from the awareness that you are nude - an awareness that becomes less important to you as you spend more time nude.

Fear of Sexual Consequences (voyeur nudity)

Many people are afraid that if they go nude, they invite unwanted attention, possibly even rape. Naturists decry sexual harassment and sexual assault, and are committed to creating an environment where women and men may both feel safe and non-threatened. Don't let this fear prevent you from trying naturism - harassment and assault are very rare, and are not tolerated by naturists. (And, by the way, naturists enjoy healthy sexual lives like most everyone else - but they enjoy them in private, like most everybody else.)

Fear of Gawkers (voyeur nudity)

By "gawkers" we mean the people who hang around naturist areas solely for the thrill of seeing naked people. Gawkers are not a problem in most areas, but you may encounter them from time to time. Don't let them make you feel uncomfortable. Instead, you should make them feel uncomfortable and out of place. Either they'll leave, or come around to our way of thinking.

Ten Things You Can Do to Promote Clothes-Freedom Environment

Ten Things You Can Do to Promote Clothes-Freedom Environment

As the current news illustrates, public nudity on beaches, college campuses, ski slopes, and elsewhere has been the subject of quite a bit of activity recently, both pro and con. In some cases (e. g. Australia and Wisconsin), nudity has won explicit (or at least tacit) approval, while in others (e. g. Florida and Hawaii), some officials are still fighting against it.

Although the legitimacy of social nudity on private property was settled long ago (in most U. S. jurisdictions), opponents continue to devise new avenues of attack. And nudity in suitable public locations remains a subject of considerable controversy, as it has for over 30 years in North America.

Victories on behalf of clothes-freedom do not come about automatically. Secure, pleasant locations for the enjoyment of nudity don't just "happen". In almost all cases, the efforts of many people have been required. Though there are many different specific actions required in each case, there are also a number of general steps people who like to be naked can take to promote the way of being that they prefer. Here's a short list. I won't explain each item in detail - each could be the subject of an essay in itself. In most cases, the purpose and benefit should be obvious.

   1. Join in any Naturist Society. (There's strength in numbers.)
   2. Contribute generously to the Naturist Action Committee.
   3. Tell your friends and family you're a naturist. Persuade those who have open minds to join you.
   4. Write to your local paper whenever some naturism-related issue comes up in the news.
   5. Write to government officials whenever some policy issue affecting naturists is being decided. (Such as the Honokohau Beach issue.)
   6. Put up your own Web page about naturism. Tell the world what it means to you.
   7. Get involved with local projects like a beach cleanup, efforts to discourage gawkers at the beach you like best, or activities to promote naturism in your community.
   8. Network with other naturists over the Internet, using things like mailing lists, the Web, chat rooms, IRC channels.
   9. Learn all you can about the history of nudism/naturism and the factors that affect it.
  10. Work for responsible standards of personal behavior at any naturist beach, club, or event you visit.
  11. Treat fellow naturists with the fullest respect any honest, responsible individual deserves.

OK, that's more than 10. And more could be added. But it seems about right as a place to start.


Remove Your Clothes

If you've just been waiting for encouragement to get naked from a mainstream source, especially if you are female, now you have it. The May issue of Mademoiselle has an article on "nude-o-phobia" which (very briefly) analyses the common fear of being naked, and offers a 5-step program to overcome it. The "5 steps to a more naked you:"

   1. Expose yourself. (Get comfortable being nude alone.)
   2. Get to know your body. (Pay attention to your body's sensory signals, especially when unclothed.)
   3. Look at yourself. (Become familiar with - and accepting of - how you look without clothes.)
   4. Move on to semipublic nudity. (In commonly acceptable circumstances, such as a locker room.)
   5. Graduate to social nudity. (The real thing.)

The feature, of course, is about body acceptance. The message has been repeated often enough, that people (women especially) are needlessly unhappy due to fears their bodies are somehow not "right". But this time the way to overcome the problem is stated very clearly. As the magazine's editor-in-chief herself says, "Go find a nude beach. Remove all your clothes."

Why Nude Beach & Social Family Nudity


We are born naked. Everyone knows that.

But the moment we leave the womb, we are wrapped in a blanket, and the skin hardly ever sees the light of day again. For the next 70+ years of life, we wrap our skin in a cocoon of fabric.

Is this healthy for our bodies? Were our bodies designed to be forever clothed? If you believe in evolution, the answer has to be no. Of course evolution didn't create a body designed for clothing.

If you believe in the Judeo-Christian divine creation of the human body, the answer must still be no. Adam and Eve lived naked in the garden of Eden. That's what their bodies were designed to do.

Why have this magnificent organ of skin enveloping our entire bodies, every square inch of it covered with delicate sensory nerves and sophisticated temperature regulation pores, then wrap it up 24/7 in artificial coverings so it's all useless? Clothing can keep us warm in extreme conditions. But in other cases, it actually interferes with the body's natural temperature regulation processes. It's obvious that a hot day would be much easier to tolerate nude than clothed. But those with experience can also testify that the nude body is able to comfortably withstand cool temperatures much easier than most people think, because clothes aren't interfering with the body's attempt to regulate internal temperature.

Protection against cold, against the elements, against injury while performing risky activities--these are good reasons for covering the miraculous organ of skin with clothing. But how can it possibly be healthy to never let it "breathe"--at least for an hour or two every day?

Experts are now starting to tell us that children are not getting enough sun. Between the hysteria of always remaining clothed and the latest fear craze of developing skin cancer, children are suffering from a vitamin D deficiency, even to the point where that supposedly archaic disease of rickets is beginning to return.

(By the way, it's much easier to notice a malignant skin tumor early enough for successful treatment if you let other people see you naked now and then.)

Physical health is only one aspect of nudity. What about our emotional health?

Who are we? We are our bodies. Whatever attitude we have toward our bodies is the attitude we have toward ourselves.

And what is the attitude we have toward our bodies? Shame.

This shame may very well be the most pervasive emotional conditioning of our lives. We prefer to call it brainwashing because it's forced upon us throughout our lives, warps our natural attitudes toward our and others' bodies, and is a deeply emotional, irrational process. Emotional abuse, in our opinion.

Is there a child on earth who is born with an aversion to nudity? Does any child care about nude bodies? Does seeing a nude body mean anything at all to a young child? Does being nude mean anything to a child, other than perhaps a more comfortable state of dress to be in than having clothing pressed against one's body?

What child wouldn't love to rip his or her clothes off and run around naked, just for the simple pleasure of it?

So where does the negative reaction to nudity come from?

Do kids grow into it naturally? Nonsense! All the societies in the history of humankind that have accepted public nudity or near-nudity would never have existed were this true.

No, the negative reaction to nudity must be brainwashed into children. And how is that done?

Through shame. Children won't leave clothes on unless we shame or threaten them into doing it.

Now why isn't that emotional abuse?

From the moment of birth, when they wrap that blanket around the newborn, we are emotionally conditioned to think of our bodies as shameful. Every minute of every day of our lives, with rare exceptions, the brainwashing is reinforced. Every moment we cover our bodies we are communicating the subliminal message to our subconscious that our bodies are shameful and must be hidden.

Every minute of every day. Is there any other type of emotional conditioning we are immersed in more?

Even our moments of nudity do not save us. When we bathe, we go into a private bathroom, close and often lock the door, pull the shower curtain, and shower nude--all alone out of sight of others. Bodily functions are done the same way.

Not even doctor's offices or locker rooms give us a break anymore. The hysterical fear of nudity in our society has become so great that nudity has almost disappeared entirely from these locales traditionally designed to accept nudity. In the doctor's office we remain covered up with our clothing or with hospital gowns, only revealing small patches of our skin when absolutely necessary. Locker rooms, saunas, etc., have lost the tradition of nudity within them. This isn't even mixed group nudity we're talking about. Even among our own sex we hide our bodies, either by not being nude at all, or by changing in a stall, or by keeping a towel carefully wrapped around ourselves.

Even when we are nude, we hide our bodies in shame. Every minute of every day.

We swim with clothes on, even though that's insane. We sleep with clothes on, even though we're tucked away under a blanket where no one will see us. We even stay dressed in front of our spouse--our sex partner--who has already seen us naked in the most intimate of circumstances and with whom more than anyone else we ought to feel comfortable being naked. Even in the privacy of our homes we stay dressed. Why?

We do it because body shame has been so deeply ingrained into our psyche that we can't imagine doing anything else. Nudity under virtually all circumstances seems so foreign to us that we can't see it as anything but a bizarre aberration, if not a downright perversion.

But we all have a body. There are billions and billions of human bodies spread throughout this world. Within the two sexes, every one of them is the same as every other. We all know what they look like--we all know what equipment they have. What on earth do we think we're hiding from each other?

Actually, we are not thinking at all when we have a negative reaction to nudity, whether we see others nude or others see us nude. It's purely an emotional, irrational reaction, based on a lifetime of deep, thorough emotional conditioning.

Emotional abuse.

Isn't it emotional abuse to condition your children to have feelings of shame and horror simply because someone accidentally sees them naked?

Isn't it emotional abuse to condition your children to feel shock, fear, or disgust at the mere sight of a human body?

Our bodies are ourselves. When we feel shame, fear, horror over bodies, we are feeling those feelings about ourselves or about our fellow human beings.

No wonder people have such a hard time relating to each other. We fear each other at a very basic level. We are all forced by nature or God to carry naked bodies with us wherever we go! Those dreadful, shocking, shameful naked bodies! What was God thinking?

How can we possibly interact normally with each other, steeped in attitudes like that?

Exactly what negative consequences result from shaming children into wearing clothes, and continuing that brainwashing process until the day they die?

Children are left in ignorance. We think it's a wonderful, educational thing to take children to the zoo. But what do they do at the zoo? Stare at the naked bodies of animals. This is considered very educational. And it is.

Yet children are never allowed to stare at the naked bodies of the species that is most important for them to learn about. Their own--human beings. It's great for them to learn all about the bodies of lions and tigers and bears, oh my! But never the body of the species they belong to and will marry. Never the body they live within throughout their lives.

Children don't get to fully understand and accept the differences between the sexes. Boys have penises, girls have vaginas. This is an undisputed fact of life. But to a boy who is not allowed to learn about human bodies, a girl does not have a vagina--she has been castrated of her penis. To a girl, a boy doesn't have a penis--he has a strange growth where his vagina should be. And these are the boys and girls lucky enough to have caught a glimpse of the opposite sex naked.

Then we wonder why there is so much sexual dysfunction in marriages?

Children don't get to become comfortable with the process of puberty before it happens. When their bodies start changing, it's a traumatic thing. Why? Because it's natural for puberty to be traumatic?

Absolutely not! It's a completely natural part of the human life cycle.

It's traumatic because they are not prepared for it. Is that not emotional abuse?

They start growing hair around their pubic area and within their armpits. What is that all about? For boys, the penis enlarges (is it diseased?) and hair begins to grow on the face. For girls, the vagina begins to bleed (am I injured?) and breasts being to enlarge on their chests.

How many horror stories have there been about children who were totally unprepared for these changes? Is that not child abuse, to allow children to enter this period of life unprepared simply because their parents are embarrassed to talk about it (thanks to their own emotional brainwashing from their parents)?

But even with children who have been "educated" about puberty, is the trauma completely absent? No, because the education is lacking in a vital area. Words cannot communicate anywhere near as effectively as images can. You can talk all day to a boy about how penises or to a girl about how breasts come in all sizes and shapes, but it won't remove the fear that their penis or breasts are abnormal. But if they have opportunities to see penises and breasts in all their amazing variety, the point is driven home that their body is just as normal and acceptable as anyone else's.

Children are not allowed to satisfy their perfectly natural curiosity when it's safe to do so. Adults have sex hormones raging through their bodies. Prepubescent children do not. When would be the best time of life to learn about human bodies?

Before children have to start dealing with sexual urges.

Yet, astoundingly, we think the most terrible thing of all is to allow a child to see an adult naked. What tragedy!

Instead, we force children to wait until they enter puberty. Then they not only have to deal with their curiosity driven by a natural and wholesome desire to become educated, but also driven by these brand new, nearly overwhelming sexual urges. They get it all dumped on them at once and are left alone to deal with it on their own.

Is it any wonder there is sexual dysfunction in our society? Is it any wonder teen sexual activity and pregnancy and venereal disease run rampant in our society?

Is this not true child abuse?

Make no mistake about it, once children reach puberty, they will start educating themselves, one way or another. If parents or some other adult authority figure doesn't help them do it, they will do it on their own.

And we all know how they will do it.

They will gather misinformation from friends as ignorant as themselves. They will develop addictions to pornography. They will experiment with nudity and sex among themselves, ignorant of the dangers involved. And they will do it all with a ghastly emotional stew of sexual arousal, shame, guilt, and rebellion mixed into it.

Oh yes, this is much better than allowing children to experience nudity under careful adult supervision before their sexual hormones start to flow.

An adult allowing a child to see him or her nude is child abuse? No, no. The law that criminalizes letting a child see an adult nude is child abuse.

Nudity that is intended to be shocking or sexual or threatening or lewd through the individual's intent and behavior--now that's child abuse. But legally defining the mere existence of nudity as lewdness or obscenity is an evil, archaic notion that must be stamped out.

Children are never taught to accept the aging cycle of human beings. Everyone dreads getting old. We think old bodies are ugly. We fear them. For God's sake, cover them up! And lo and behold, look at the youth-worshiping culture we now have. Coincidence?

Billions of dollars are spent on cosmetics, clothing, even surgery, to try and pretend we're not getting old. Why? Because we fear it. Why? Because we never see it.

Because we constantly hide our bodies from one another, we never get to see the natural aging life cycle of human bodies. That which is hidden from us is mysterious and frightening.

If we could simply see human bodies in all the different stages of aging on a regular basis, it would be a familiar sight to us, a comfortable sight. Aging would be a natural thing, not something to fight tooth and nail in dread.

Is it not emotional abuse to teach people to fear the natural life cycles of their own bodies?

Children, like all people, equate their bodies with themselves. They are their bodies. If we teach them to be afraid and ashamed of their bodies (and we do), they will be ashamed of themselves. And thus a rampant epidemic of self-loathing thrives in our culture.

Especially our girls. The most beautiful women in the world still think there's something wrong with their bodies.

Children are killing themselves over poor self-image. The girl that purges or starves herself to death because she can't accept her body is a victim of the self-loathing that anti-nude attitudes help to foster. The gang banger who carries a gun and kills someone for "dissing" him is literally killing children over self-esteem. "You disrespect me, you die."

And where does this rampant lack of self-esteem come from? The causes are complex, but how can the lifelong shame we feel over our own bodies not be a contributor?

Our luxury of hiding nudity from each other may even be killing our children. Never mind emotional abuse. This is physical abuse of the ugliest kind. All because we don't want to see a nude human body.

That's where the true shame lies, not in our bodies!

Many children never get to feel totally comfortable with the opposite sex and never get an adequate education on human bodies to satisfy their curiosity. Most children will not tolerate this situation forever. If the adult community won't satisfy their need for knowledge in safe, appropriate, supervised environments, they will do it on their own. They will do it in any way they can. Since the adult community forbids them from experiencing nudity in safe, wholesome ways, they will resort to other means.

As they resort to other means, their normal, natural desire to satisfy curiosity gets mixed up with all sorts of negative feelings. Guilt, shame, embarrassment, self-loathing, fear of punishment. Because these negative emotions keep many children from doing too much experimenting before puberty, experimenting happens after puberty when the powerful sex drive overcomes the negative emotions.

So now we have guilt, shame, embarrassment, fear, and self-loathing associated with sexual arousal too. And we expect healthy adult relations to develop from this?

Because the adolescent feels all these negative emotions associated with normal and natural curiosity and sexual urges, and because the adolescent is still trying to develop effective skills at relating with the opposite sex, that adolescent will feel intimidated by the opposite sex.

So what will some adolescents do? Resort to less intimidating individuals to do their experimenting with. Resort to younger children.

And a possible sexual predator is born.

Do I even need to point out how this is emotional abuse?

Our society in the last few decades has become more and more antagonistic toward nudity. Where once skinnydipping was the norm among Boy Scouts and required at YMCA pools, where once locker rooms were actually used to change clothes in, where once doctor's offices were a place where doctors could easily access the human body they were supposed to give medical attention to, we now have a near absence of nudity anywhere in normal life.

Nowhere can we find wholesome, nonsexual images of the nude human body. Nowhere can we enjoy the affirming, even healing experience of being nude in front of someone else and be accepted for who we are. We have forfeited all images of the human body to those who would portray it in sexual and degrading ways. All because, from birth, we are brainwashed into believing nudity is harmful.

And why do we do that to our children? Because our parents did it to us. Because their parents did it to them. And so on and so on.

When will we break this destructive cycle?

No one ever tries, because no one ever thinks about it. You don't question something that has been brainwashed into you every minute of your life since birth.

But we need to question it. The emotional and physical health of our children are at stake. In some cases, even their very lives are at stake. Aren't these important enough reasons to question something you've simply assumed was true all your life?

Family Skinnydippers is very serious about these issues. Perhaps now you can understand why social nudity is so important to us. This is not merely a lifestyle choice. This is not merely the enjoyment of nude recreation. This is a vital cause to us. It's a cause we feel is worth fighting and sacrificing for.

Do we demand constant nudity?

Of course not. There are many times when nudity would be uncomfortable, even downright unhealthy.

Do we demand that everyone be nude, whether they like it or not?

Perish the thought. That would be as immoral as using the law to force everyone to wear clothes all the time.

All we ask is that those who wish to be nude under reasonable circumstances be allowed to do so. Not for shock value, not for sexual titillation, not for confrontational purposes, not for exhibitionist urges. Simply because nudity is a natural, comfortable, pleasant, wholesome, healthy thing to be every so often. Those who enjoy it ought to be able to do so. Those who don't enjoy it don't have to do it at all.

But what if a person is offended at nudity?

Our blunt answer to that person: grow up. Why should people be forced by threat of law to do something they strongly disagree with, if the only harm to you is that you choose (emphasis on the word choose) to be offended?

The amazing truth that our society has a hard time grasping because the brainwashing is so pervasive, is that human beings get used to nudity very quickly. How can a lifetime of brainwashing be overcome literally within hours, if not minutes? That's a testament to how unnatural and pointless the brainwashing was in the first place.

If you're afraid you'll be shocked at the nudity of others, that will wear off quickly. If you're afraid you'll be sexually aroused at the sight of nudity, perhaps you will be for a while. But even that loses its power in a short time. The overwhelming realization of the vast majority of people who are finally exposed to normal, nonsexual nudity after a lifetime of brainwashing is that it was never a big deal in the first place.

The only embarrassment we need to feel about nudity is how frightened over nothing we were all our lives.