Tuesday, January 28, 2020


QUOTES 1/28/2020

“Once you have tasted the feeling of swimming without a trunk and sunbathing without a wet trunk, there is no comeback.” – WhyNotAgain, http://www.vogue.com/13485903/male-nude-sunbathing-vacation-tom-brady-orlando-bloom-justin-bieber/

“Playing Ball with Greg” (video) - https://vimeo.com/24761448

“In our society, where nudity is very rare, the information content of being naked is therefore usually quite large.  And so any laws that exist against nudity actually deprive people of the ability to exchange measurably large quantities of something – information.  In other words, anti-nudity laws amount to confiscation by the government of a valuable commodity.” - https://naturistphilosopher.wordpress.com/2014/01/03/the-information-content-of-nudity/

“Well, Naked Gardening Day came and went and I did not garden naked because it was too darned cold in Tennessee.  Then again, I've been gardening naked since April, so missing it Saturday was no big deal.” – Mary Mannon Reeves, https://www.facebook.com/groups/nuddism/

“It’s hard to predict how any visitor will react . . . You could just approach them nude and then put something on if they appear to be uncomfortable.  If you know the person approaching is uncomfortable with it, then you could go and fetch something to put on, asking them to wait while you go grab something.  They can always look away for the time being.  That would seem less awkward than the ‘run and hide,’ which I can imagine also resulting in paranoia, where you’d constantly feel like you have to be on guard, on your own property. And it gives the impression that you’re doing something wrong / shameful, which you’ re not, as there’s nothing wrong with hanging out naked at home.  If you act calm and casual about it, then that will help show them that it’s not a big deal.  You can tell them you just like to be nude because it’s more comfortable.” – Felicity Jones, https://youngnaturistsamerica.com/home-nudist-etiquette-visitors/

“Being uncomfortable with nudity is not a natural human condition – it is a social artifact. . . wearing clothes all the time is historically and culturally bound.  A person (children are people too) who is accustomed to seeing the body as normal and not something secret or to be hidden is less likely to feel uncomfortable about bodies” – Emily, http://offbeathome.com/parent-nudity-in-house/

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