Does naturism really provide freedom?

Via the a survey about naturism we’ve done some time ago, we asked more than 1000 naturists (or nudists as 35% of the participants prefer to call themselves) what naturism means to them. One of the most impressive numbers came from the question about what people see as the advantages of naturism. What they gain from it. More than 86% mentioned a “feeling of freedom”. The fact that naturists feel more free when they shed their clothes is not really something new. We’ve experienced this ourselves and you can read about this on thousands of forums and chat groups. Only last week we were at a naturist resort in Argentina and this was mentioned.

 

Also on Naked Wanderings the subject of freedom has come up, often even in completely off topic comments. We can’t really describe what this feeling is all about and for textiles it’s even more difficult to understand. How can we believe that we’re more free without clothes? They wonder if we aren’t just kidding ourselves and each other. In the end, we still have a job to go to, taxes to pay and a government to listen to. Aren’t we just creating some surreal environment to escape reality?

 

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The answer, at least to us, is that feelings aren’t discussable. Period. Some feel afraid of height when they get two steps up a ladder. Others feel in love with someone we dislike. Some still feel hungry when they just had a big fat steak.
But this answer would be too easy (and make this blog post ridiculously short). Another answer would be that people appreciate naturism for different reasons and that this feeling of freedom tends to come back in many of them.

Freedom of being clothes free

This is the most easy one and also the most logical. If you like to be naked and you’re not allowed to, clothes can feel suffocating. Taking them off will make you feel more free. This is not something typical for naturists by the way. How many take off their suit the moment when they come home from the office? It’s not that it will get more dirty if you keep it on an hour more and it’s not that it’s so uncomfortable because you’ve been wearing it all day anyway. But the moment people come home, they like to switch clothes. Working clothes are changed for home clothes (or no clothes for the naturist) and working time is changed to home time. Just by taking off our clothes we switch of work.

 

Another especially non naturist place where we’ve noticed a link with clothes and freedom was in Iran. As most of you probably know, women in this country have to be covered from neck to wrists to ankles and also have to wear something to cover their hair. While we were traveling through this country we stayed at people’s homes from time to time. Most of our female hosts, the moment they came home they took off their “outside clothes” and switched into something that could quite often be considered pretty sexy. For them, their clothes were part of the suppression and being able to take them off at home made them feel free.

Free you nude body

Society, the fashion industry and the plastic surgery industry likes to tell us how we have to look. What they like even more, is to change their idea of the perfect woman and man several times a year. Today we have to look skinny, tomorrow we need a beer belly, next week we need big breasts and some time later it’s much more “beautiful” to almost have no breasts at all. We need a round butt, a skinny butt or a flat butt. We need to be muscular or cuddlesome. We need to be the new man or the old man or the new man again.
Bottomline of this all: We need to be unhappy about how we look so we would buy their products to look “better”. Season after season after season.

 

Nobody is perfect, or so we are being told. So what most of society does is to spend impressive amounts of money to make their imperfections go away or at least to hide them for the rest of the world. Naturists like to say that “everybody is perfect”, which is a nice way of thinking but we don’t agree with this 100%. For us it’s mostly about accepting our “flaws”. We all have things we’d love to be bigger, smaller, stronger or smoother but instead of hiding them from each other we expose ourselves how we are. In this case, the freedom comes from the acceptance. I am who I am and you are who you are. And it does not matter how we look. For this reason, the terms “body acceptance” and “body freedom” are often mixed. Because basically they are the same. When you accept your body, you will feel more free.

Free your mind to a naked state

This is probably the most difficult kind of freedom to explain. Not only does society and the several industries set the norm about how we need to look, they also like to influence how we think. Apple might be a good example here, nobody needed a smartphone until Apple came up with the iPhone. The media and the government tells us who are the good guys and who are the bad ones and we get stuck in a box of ideas that are not really our own.

 

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Naturism and especially social nudity is for many a huge step out of their comfort zone. It’s against society’s rules and we know that some of our friends and relatives may think that our newly found lifestyle is pretty weird. But we do it anyway. And we enjoy it. And we meet other people who went through the same initial steps. And suddenly we realise that there’s life outside of the box.

 

 
Some might call this a middle finger towards society’s standards. Some might call this a middle finger towards Apple or the government or prudery. But it doesn’t necessarily has to have anything to do with fingers. By getting out of your comfort zone this one time and by thinking out of the box you set a spark for other ideas that may not be that conventional either. And lucky you, the same thing happens with other naturists. Therefor we found naturist places in general places where ideas can be shared without having to fear the opinions of others. Places where people listen to you and may agree or may not but where open discussions are still possible.

What does freedom mean anyway?

What does it all matter? We feel free and we like it. Isn’t that all that counts? Another idea we’d like to share with you is that maybe we’re using the word “free” in a slightly wrong way. A word that comes closer to the truth might be “liberation”. We feel liberated. Liberated from clothes, from society, from body issues and from forced ideas. But what’s in a name? Freedom is no absolute idea. The feeling of freedom doesn’t necessarily mean that we feel free in every possible way. So yes, we feel more free when we are naked. Yes, we feel more liberated when we are naked. And as a consequence, yes, naturism does provide freedom.

 
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16 thoughts on “Does naturism really provide freedom?”

  1. The body of a slave is owned and controlled by his Master.
    The body of a FREE man is under his own control.

    When we are not allowed to be naked our bodies are being owned and controlled by our Masters. We are not free men when forced to cover and hide our bodies.

    Reply
  2. Nice post. In the midst of an ongoing conversation with a friend who is relatively new to naturism (and loving it). I think this will help her a lot.

    Reply
  3. What bothers me about using the word freedom, is just the simple fact how often it is used .. its like those words .. i love you .. when one says it sooo many times to soo many ppl, it kida looses its meaning and power .. well same goes for freedom.
    Ya i can agree with some of the written, but i generaly think that it is important what freedom is, cause saying that being naked is freedom, and saying having freedom after 20 years of war, are so far appart, that its even sencless to discuss it.
    What naturism provides is being different then the majority , same as being gay and so on ..so its more like being free to express ur self.

    Reply
    • It’s like we write at the start of the article… Freedom is a feeling and feelings are personal. If you say that you feel more free when you’re naked or listening to a certain song or bungee jumping off a bridge, we’re not the ones to say that you aren’t. Just like we answered to your other comment, it’s kind of a gradient and if we should only mention this when we experience something 100%, we would have to leave out many words from our dictionary.

      When can you say you love your wife? When you prefer to be with her instead of someone else? When you would give your life to save hers? When?
      When can you say you’re hungry? When you haven’t eaten for a day? For a week? When you lost 50 kilos and are almost fainting?
      When can you say something hurts? When you hit your thumb with a hammer? When you’re in a serious accident?
      We can go on and on about this.

      The curious thing is that 86% of the participants of our survey experience a feeling of freedom when they’re naked… Something must be happening, right? 😉

      Reply
      • Hum well , i dont think freedom is a personal thing.
        Cause if it is, then slavery is a personal thing as well, so is it? If in the old days a black dude is chained , and is working just for food so he can live another day to do the same tomorrow, says i feel free when they give me the food i eat, does that mean he has freedom just cause he feels that way?.. i doubt..
        I think we can agree and i read about it somewhere as well that most of the nudies are “the well educated ppl” wiht a “higher IQ” , hence those ppl dont really know whats its like actually not to be free, so being nude and feeling free cause of that ,is more like a 1st world feeling, and that sure does make sence when its noted that most of the nudies are ppl of higher education, wealth and such.
        I dont like playing games with words, i mean no offence, but tell that 86% to someone in Syria, would be interesting to hear a responce ,what freedom is for them ..

        Reply
  4. I agree with what you wrote. I know we’ve gone back and forth in the past. Even though some of us have limitations on when we can be nude, we always get to experience the joy of being free or liberated when we are. I’m still working with my wife on being opening to nudism. I do enjoy the freedom when she isn’t home.

    Reply
  5. Great thought provoking article and I am sure there will be many discussions about it, even behind the locked gates of naturist clubs. I do believe like iceman that freedom is not just a feeling but the right and ability to self determine without fear of consequences. Naturism is a freedom, not just a feeling of freedom. Everybody steps out of the shower naked in the morning, but some people put clothes on for the whole day because society has programmed them into believing that their world will fall apart if they do not. A naturist is someone who has discovered that they have a choice, a real freedom to decide – maybe not everywhere but certainly somewhere- to wear clothes or not. So even when you are dressed you are dressed by choice. A person does not always know they are not free until they have tasted freedom. For some it is enough to be alone at home, or with other naturists or just family. For others it becomes a crusade to rid the world of clothes. Either way it is a choice that textiles do not have because of fear.

    Reply
    • @madeofstars

      But that can be said about lots of things, but some ,you dont care about out, some u just dont want to do , some are legal but u dont mind or do mind for them , some are illegal and u dont mind or do mind for them.
      Being nude is 1 in a million, just cause u can be nude somehwere , thats not freedom and has nothing to do with textiles.

      Reply
  6. @iceman

    You can chose to be nude even if it’s just in your home. You can experience being free from your clothes whenever you want – as long as it’s within the law of your country and you respect other people’s comfort zones.

    Reply
  7. Sadly enough, we can only be naked at home, nude beach or a campsite. We don’t have the freedom to be naked wherever we want…

    Reply
  8. I wonder if part of that indefinable freedom is the freeing of our biggest sensory organ, the skin, that is otherwise smothered in layers of clothing – I think that’s a big part of it for me, the feeling the air moving, sun, warmth, cold, rain, snowflakes and all – that all round sense of awareness and being indivisibly part of, and connected to, my surroundings that clothing otherwise smothers.

    Reply
  9. I just like feeling the warmth of the sun on my naked body and the sensation of the water flowing against my bare skin when I swim. It’s as simple as that. Call it what you want. As the descendant of people who were enslaved I can say my forebears’ yearned for a freedom that was more fundamental. They wanted more of the ‘basic needs’ kind of freedom and that was more pressing than the kind of ‘self-actualizing’ freedom Nick and Lins are talking about.

    Reply
    • Lots of people (including ourselves) confuse freedom with liberation. The feeling that many experience is rather the liberation from the artificial mental boundaries that come with wearing clothes.

      Reply

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