This is the "Naked Normalization." Within the first fifteen minutes, your hyper-vigilant brain realizes that no one is judging your love handles because they are too busy making sure their own towel is straight. The eye-leveling effect of nudity is profound. When clothes come off, so do the socioeconomic and aesthetic hierarchies. Psychologists who study nudism point to a phenomenon called "body neutrality through exposure." Body positivity suggests you must love every roll and freckle actively. That is a high bar. Naturism suggests a simpler path: indifference.
In an era dominated by curated Instagram feeds, AI-generated beauty standards, and filters that sculpt our waists before we even hit "post," the concept of body positivity has never been more critical—or more co-opted. What started as a grassroots movement to uplift marginalized bodies has sometimes been diluted into a consumer trend where cellulite is allowed, but only if you buy the expensive cream to "reduce its appearance." This is the "Naked Normalization
You do not need to be "body positive" in the loud, activist sense. You do not need to post a nude selfie to prove your confidence. You just need to take off your clothes, step into a community of real, unedited humans, and realize that you were never broken to begin with. Psychologists who study nudism point to a phenomenon