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..!










