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A Woman's View:
Who Wins in Nude Recreation?
Reprinted from the
California Naturist,
August 1996
Almost
all who come to Lupin, or other safe and comfortable nude recreation
environments, are winners. They win exhilarating freedom, blissful
relaxation, and solid comfort with their bodies and others. Women, however,
are the main winners, because women especially have been taught to be
alienated from their bodies and their power. The "weaker sex" carries the
heaviest load of repression related to reasons for wearing clothes--poor
body image, guilt-induced and legally required modesty, and fear of sexual
harassment or assault. Men, of course, have to deal with most of these same
general issues, but for them the scale is smaller and the pressure less
intense. So, let's look at the feminine side of things and see why lifting
off light-weight garments can feel like removing a growth-stunting, massive
burden.
Poor Body Image
Most females are taught from infancy--by almost
everyone and everything they come in contact with, including Barbie
dolls--that only a few body types are OK, that nothing should jiggle, and
that thin is in (except for breasts, which should be large and perky). As a
result of the body image onslaught, normal-size eight-year-olds are dieting,
teenagers who haven't fully matured covet breast implants, and large women
often feel like pariahs.
A major use of clothing, then, is to make us
look "better" by concealing, camouflaging, or temporarily reshaping
(compressing, lifting, or molding) body "defects." Interestingly, although
women know the visual trickery that clothing is used for, we all can
convince ourselves that--underneath the garments--most other women have more
attractive bodies.
Taking off the false skin of clothing, and
being accepted--big hips, flabby tummy, sagging breasts, and all--is
powerfully validating. It also helps lighten the "I'm so ugly" load to see
that other bodies, without their cover-ups, look as comfortably imperfect
and real as ours.
Guilt-Induced and Legally Required Modesty
Males and females are taught that some body
functions--and the body parts associated with them--are not nice, and should
not be acknowledged, much less seen, in polite society. The current
generally banned body parts are the genitals, the anus, and--for unclear
reasons--the buttocks and women's breasts. (Buttocks and breasts, which are
not primarily associated with activities other than sitting and breast
feeding, appear to some extent to be breaking out of confinement. Thong
bikinis and topfree sunning are tolerated on many clothed beaches.)
Because women's breasts were for years on the
"banned" list, women have generally been saddled with much more cumbersome
athletic and recreational clothing than men. Female stripped-down outfits,
like swim suits and leotards, cover roughly two times the body surface
hidden by male minimal sporting togs. It follows that, in a comfortable nude
situation, a woman would probably feel more--twice?--the freedom.
Fear of Sexual Harassment or Assault
Rapes of males are regrettably becoming more
common--or at least more often reported--but it's doubtful that assaulted
men are doubly victimized, as women often are, by being blamed for bringing
attacks on themselves by being too scantily clad. Women are taught, in
essence, that it is their responsibility to control, through demure clothing
and actions, the way men act toward them. Being made responsible for someone
else's feelings and actions, and being subjected to very negative
consequences if one "fails," is an unrealistic and stressful imposition.
Perhaps the most freeing and relaxing factors
for women in a comfortable nude setting are being able to put down the
burden of (false) responsibility for others, and seeing that men don't find
it impassible to control themselves at the sight of a naked female body. In
fact, instead of being made to feel like a sex object, a nude woman usually
feels more equal to a nude man than she's able to when she's clothed and
with a clothed male. Anyone nude is down to basics, and at a basic level,
we're all equal.
Mollie Moore-Sullivan
Source from:
http://www.lupinlodge.org/whowins.html
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