Normalising The Nude With More Nudity.
People are born nude. People go nude for recreation. Yet if someone wants to make a living from being nude, then suddenly that becomes an issue for so many. Rochelle wasn’t a nude model until very recently. She enjoyed it so much that she has decided to keep at it.
Parents, friends, partners, all have issues if they find out that you are a nude model. Why should it be an issue? Nude is not just natural, but it is the true identity of us all. Clothes are just a mask to cover who we really are.
Without nude models there wouldn’t be art. Think of all the great works over the past few centuries. Think about what sort of world we would live in today without the contribution of everyone who disrobed for an artist. Think of the risk those people took. It wasn’t just a few disapproving looks or a nasty comment post on social media. It was actual potential harm.
Even today, some people are threatened with the loss of their full time or main job or ostracized by family. All because they took off their mask. There is an ongoing Taboo in regard to nudity. It is almost like there is an undeclared or unofficial “war on nudity”. One that mainstream media is supporting either knowingly or indirectly. What is the reasoning behind this? Why is it despite so much community support for non-sexual nudity with events like world naked bike ride, nude fun runs, and legalising of bare female breasts in more and more places. Why is there still such resistance to general nudity?
Guys don’t have to worry. Even if you see nude women everyday, you will not loose your interest in women. Seeing bare breasts will not make you like bare breasts any less. It also won't turn you into a serial rapist either. Good people will continue to be good people. Nudity is not going to change that.
We hope that with more nudity it will become normalised in time. It is with the help of people like Rochelle, who become nude models, that will eventually help to de-stigmatise the nude human form.