Everyone’s a Little Bit Nudist

Show yourself, you little textile!

By Celia Gurney

Published February 27, 2009

Some people regard nakedness as a private matter. They shower naked — alone. They dance naked —alone. They receive a buttocks-focused massage while naked — with the massage therapist, but otherwise alone.

Others find a certain dangerous appeal in nakedness. These thrill-seekers run naked through the streets at night, teasing neighbors with glimpses of their pale, fleshy secrets.

Still others see nakedness as a lifestyle. They go without clothing in the belief that the practice nurtures the mind, body, and soul.

These are the naturists.

Naturists believe that the human body is not bad, ugly, or illegal. They enjoy the world at its most natural by experiencing nature in the nude. Unlike the term nudist, which merely indicates a preference for being nude, the term naturist indicates the choice of an active, natural lifestyle that includes indoor and outdoor clothing-optional recreation.

In Mount Vernon, the Lake Associates Recreation Club (LARC) boasts hiking trails and waterfalls. Kaniksu Ranch hosts the annual Bare Buns Fun Run. Forestia Snoqualmie, near Issaquah, offers the annual Nudestock, a naked day in the park with live music. Featured bands include the Boys of Greenwood Glen, a “drinking band with an Irish problem.”

Unfortunately, most resorts in Washington aren’t open year-round, and the temperature at Oregon’s legal nude beaches isn’t always ideal for bare skin. Naturists have to look elsewhere during the winter months. They often look to nude recreation events clubs, which provide the events without the vacation price tag.

Sun Lovers Under Gray Skies (SLUGS) is a Pacific Northwest club devoted to clothing-optional activities. The SLUGS website features an events calendar filled with nude swims.

Naturist websites frequently refer to the welcoming environments of their respective resorts and clubs. Richard, current president of the SLUGS, said part of being a naturist is recognizing that people come in all shapes and sizes.

“Feeling ashamed of your body is a learned behavior,” he said. “It is not healthy.”

The modern quest for less shame and more health began in Germany, where nudist colonies sprouted up in the early 1900s. Then, in 1929, a German named Kurt Barthel moved to the U.S. and founded the American League for Physical Culture. It was the first nudist organization in the U.S. and still exists today, although it operates under a different name — the American Association for Nude Recreation (AANR). The AANR and The Naturist Society (TNS), founded by Lee Baxandall in 1980, are the two leading naturist organizations in the U.S.

Today, the AANR has more than 50,000 members in North America; TNS has 182 members in its Facebook group and an unknown (but presumably great) number of actual members.

Despite the popularity of both, recruiting for naturist activities can be tricky.

The AANR website references those universal experiences of young nudism —skinny-dipping and streaking. It promises that participating in clothing-optional activities will renew that carefree feeling. It also includes pictures of attractive nude families treading water in sparkling cerulean pools.

The LARC website provides reassuring testimonials from first-time nudists. One woman wrote that she felt safe at the LARC because “where would anyone conceal a gun?”

In another testimonial, a woman named Alice Anderson assuaged many a first-timer’s fears when she wrote, “They [the nudists] looked me in the eyes when we spoke.”

Anderson also wrote of the shame she felt toward her body for decades. After years of unhealthy dieting, she decided to attend a clothing-optional barbecue with a new friend. Upon arrival, she was amazed to see people of all ages having family-friendly fun together without clothes, embarrassment or judgment.

It didn’t take long for her to join in.

To be clear, the fun at AANR– and TNS-associated clubs and functions is always locker-room appropriate. All laws still apply. Lewd acts in public are still illegal, although the porn industry may imply otherwise.

Michael, a member of the SLUGS, said that the club is strict regarding public displays of affection, but that some non-AANR resorts allow suggestive dancing and other questionable activities.

Outsiders might believe that naturism itself is a suggestive activity. But Michael said the erotic appeal of being nude with nude people faded within ten minutes of his first naturist experience. After that, he simply had an overwhelming feeling of “being home.”

“I knew what the rules were and the rules made absolute sense for the first time since childhood,” he said. “I was free to be the child I once was.”

Michael praised chaste social nudity as a way to combat the media’s ever-sexual portrayal of women. He said television, magazines, and movies teach boys that the female body is always erotic, turning curiosity into sexual perversion.

Richard said that textiles, or people who prefer to remain clothed, react in one of three ways when he tells them he is a naturist. Some react in a negative, uninformed manner; some say they don’t see anything wrong with naturism but wouldn’t participate; and some are impressed with the courage necessary for the lifestyle.

Fear of the first reaction is why many naturists don’t publicize their preference for nude recreation.

“Some employers have codes of conduct that limit the activities they allow their employees to participate in,” Richard said. “They might misjudge the naturist activities for something lewd.”

But as they say at TNS, “nude is not lewd.” Nude is also not crude. Even naturists’ babies aren’t allowed to defecate on public property — so they wear (gasp!) diapers.

“No one wants a rampant pooper decorating the place,” Richard said. “Necessity for clothes is not lost on nudists.”

Shirley Gauthier, longtime AANR member, echoed Richard’s sentiments about necessary clothing. Her lifestyle is “nude whenever possible and clothed when appropriate, with behavior I never have to apologize for.”

Gauthier volunteers for the AANR Government Affairs Team (GAT), which works with communities to protect, preserve, and promote nude recreation.

“Often a piece of legislation sponsored by a concerned legislator and directed toward a strip bar will have potential unintended consequences for family nude recreation,” she said. “We then approach the legislator to consider the impact that the bill might have on nude recreation.”

Efforts like Gauthier’s make it clear that naturism is more than just a secondary hobby.

“I wish I could better explain the enormous emotional release and healing that my experiences with SLUGS have brought me,” Michael said. “I feel more spiritually and emotionally healthy than I have for most of my life.”

6 Responses to “Everyone’s a Little Bit Nudist”

  1. Shirley Gauthier says:

    When I made the decision to particpate in this article I had no idea it would be so professional and well researched. Thanks for taking the time to research and write an informative piece that opens the door to our nudist community in a positive way.

    Shirley Gauthier

  2. Michael says:

    Thank you for the excellent article. Your’s has the best balance I have seen in an article on this subject. When the evening news guys on TV talk about the Fremont Solstice Parade, with its nude cyclists, the newsreader has a smirk on his face the whole time like a little boy talking about a “naughty” thing.

    I think you came off as a mature observer of “different” people.

    Thanks for your work and keep in touch for exciting new developments.

  3. Howard Williamson says:

    This article is a very mature, unbiased look at naturism. Its author did very good research and presented the information found in a non-judgmental and calm manner — one which does justice to good journalism — and an approach that should be noted by most of today’s professional news media. It is a very good picture of how nudism and naturism is really practiced in today’s society. It is sad that our legislature, local governments, and law enforcement can’t approach it with the same manner. We would all be healthier and happier if being nude were simply another choice of acceptable “clothing” that people “wear.”

    Keep up the good work.

  4. Mike says:

    Great article Celia and well researched.Most conventional media treat nudism as a freaky side show to entertain the masses. It’s really about body acceptance without the shameful or erotic connotations.Nudism gives me a more positive body image(by the way,I’m NOT a model type)and it just feels relaxing to be nude in a pool/hot tub/outdoors.Another benefit of nudism is that I am judged on my character instead of my car/brand of clothing/social standing/speech/music/politics/etc.All societal labels are stripped..pardon the pun.Nudists are my new extended family..something positive in a culture lacking community.I feel like Ponce de Leon reaching the proverbial Fountain of Youth.:0 Thanks again for the great article Ms Gurney.

  5. Heber says:

    When a friend of mine learned she was pregnant with a boy, she decided she did not want him to be programmed by Playboy and Madison Avenue and Religious Fundamentalism.

    She explained that American guys are conditioned to lust over any glimpse of female form, while being told that to do so is sinful and forbidden, and therefore pruriently desirable. Girls (and guys to a lesser extent) are taught that to be of value they have to be young, firm, shaped like a model, totally symmetrical, and airbrushed to perfection.

    My friend decided she wanted to raise her boy with body acceptance, so she screwed up her courage and visited a clothing-optional beach. Three years later when she told me, she was still amazed with the warm welcome and safety she felt. She said now she’ll never go to a textile beach without a big guy as body guard. But she feels comfortable going solo to free beaches, napping, letting her little boy play, watching the sun set. She knows if there was a problem of any kind, everyone around would help.

    Excellent article, Celia. Written with simplicity and clarity. I’m sure it’ll trigger a lot of beneficial conversation, maybe some introspection. If we can accept ourselves, just maybe we’ll be able to accept each other.

  6. Manel says:

    Well, I am debating a totally different take on Nudism. Somehow Eroticism and Nudism are not too far behind. In fact they are two sides of the same coin. Lets analyze some of the facts to bring forth the point.

    AANR spoke about skinny dipping and streaking as expression of freedom we all forgot. However these are seeded in the erotic experience derived while doing any activity that is illegal or bordering on same. For a young kid, there is nothing like skinny dipping or streaking, though he engages in that everyday. What changes the experience is when you know it is illegal and there is an erotic thrill about it.

    My own experience was highly diverse than what a typical naturist would like you to believe. Yes, within 10 minutes I was not conscious of myself, my sexuality or of those who looked mostly like me – an average body type with a bulge here and there. However, I was acutely aware of some highly sexual young bodies around me who were a constant distraction, pushing me back to the eroticism, that we all are wanting to forget in nudism. Nudism is now closely associated with ‘Lifestlye’, mainly because of this reason. So much so that many erstwhile AANR clubs are now adult only and openly supportive of lifestyle.

    As for connecting with nature, I experienced nothing different here. If you say you are unaware of your nudity, how can it be different when you are in textile. The feel of the breeze on the body does not change drastically minus a piece of cloth, unless there is something sensual about that feeling. As for getting comfortable with your body, you can get comfortable after a day out on a regular beach. There are all kinds of bodies that make a crowd. As for this being a social leveler, how many of these nudists can carry the friendship when textile. After all, there is a whole lot of difference between a lawyer and a lumberjack in real world and their paths only meet when in buff.

    All in all, I am debating and look forward to someone who can post a counter. I have not stopped being curious about nudism – it is just that I am not getting convinced about the plain Jane arguments.

Leave a Reply