Part 5: Naturism as a Couple: Intimacy and Keeping It Fresh
This is the final in our five-part series on Couples in Naturism. This is probably the most controversial topic that seems to come up often and needs to be discussed. This is about personal intimacy and keeping it fresh in a naturist relationship and in naturist spaces. The views here are how we live our naturist life.

Who decided that too much nudity kills desire?
Let’s get something straight: if you think being naked around your partner all the time ruins intimacy, you’re confusing mystery with emotional immaturity. We have heard it often; “Don’t you get bored?” or “Isn’t the spark gone if you’re always nude?”
It’s a fair question in a world that treats nudity like a performance. Something to be revealed in private, teased out in the right lighting, tied to seduction and surprise. The cultural script tells us that desire depends on hiding and revealing. That mystery fuels attraction. There are sections of the clothing industry designed to exploit this.
For some, the idea of everyday nudity sounds like passion’s slow death.
Intimacy and Keeping it Fresh
Here’s the truth: nudity doesn’t kill desire. In fact, it’s the layers, emotional and physical that we are constantly told to keep on that smother it.
When nudity stops being a novelty, it starts being something else entirely. Something more grounded, more honest. It stops being a spectacle and becomes a shared state of comfort and presence. We stop seeing each other as collections of body parts and start seeing each other as whole people… beautiful, confident, and real.
Naturism invites us to truly see one another again. To appreciate the beauty of the human form, in all its colors, shapes, and sizes. No filters, no fabric to distract or conceal. Whether it’s in photography or in the quiet of daily life, the raw and natural body reveals strength, vulnerability, history, personality. That’s art. And when your partner is that art, real and alive before you, the connection becomes electric.
We stop using clothing to manufacture sex appeal and we begin to understand what real intimacy is. Naturism isn’t about stripping off for shock value. It is about showing up raw, real, and fully present. Desire doesn’t fade with familiarity. It deepens when performance ends.
I remember a moment when Corin and I were at Orient Beach in Saint Martin. We were just sitting there, enjoying the drinks we had just picked up at the bar. There was a raw confidence that I truly felt and could see in her. Among hundreds of other nude people, there was no anxiety, no fears, no judgement. It was a moment when our connection felt deeper, not less romantic.

Confidence Is Hot. Naturism Builds It.
Business profits off your insecurities. Fashion, beauty, fitness. It is a billion-dollar game designed to make you feel not enough. Naturism calls bullshit on all of it.
When you live clothes-free regularly, you stop hiding from yourself. You see your body not as a problem to fix, but as a place to be. That shift, subtle at first, becomes powerful over time. And you will see it in your partner too. It’s in the way they stand taller, stretch wider, laugh louder. The way they walk with intention instead of hesitation. The comfort they show in the everyday, whether cooking, gardening, swimming, or lounging. There’s no more adjusting clothes, covering bellies, hiding scars. There’s just presence. Ease. Peace.
Watching someone move through the world without shame is magnetic. It is not about showing off, it’s about showing up. Fully. Authentically. And that is far more attractive than anything bought off a shelf.
That first time at Paya Bay we mentioned in a previous post. Our first time nude among strangers. After all the nervousness was over and we had stripped ourselves bare in front of others. I saw it. I saw the change in Corin. She walked taller and her shoulders were back. She was not trying to hide any body parts or scars anymore. And there was a big smile. She was living in the moment. Free.

Emotional Nudity Is the Real Turn-On
Let’s talk about the real nakedness. We often say naturism is about more than taking off your clothes. It’s about taking off your armor.
Physical nudity is just the start. Emotional nudity? That’s the real frontier. And naturism gives us the tools to explore it. Emotional nudity means being unguarded. Dropping the social mask. Telling the truth about what you feel, what you want, what you need. It is intimacy with the lights all the way on. No hiding. No posing. Just raw, honest connection.
Naturism accelerates that honesty. When you’re used to being physically exposed, the leap to emotional vulnerability doesn’t feel quite so terrifying. In fact, it becomes natural. You get better at hearing each other. Better at being seen. Better at loving without conditions. It makes physical closeness feel more intimate, not less. Because it is no longer about seduction, it’s about sincerity.
Naturism Isn’t Boring—It’s Liberating
Some think removing clothing removes excitement. They couldn’t be more wrong. In truth, it removes distraction. What’s left is clarity, presence, and a deeper kind of fun.
Naturist living creates room for real connection through touch, play, silence, and shared experience. Naturist travel, nature walks, skinny dips, and lazy sun-soaked afternoons all become shared rituals. They don’t need to be dramatic to be meaningful. Even a slow morning without clothes can feel like a return to something essential.
These moments become vivid. Intentional. Unforgettable.
That’s the secret: you don’t need elaborate gestures or props to keep a relationship alive. You just need to actually be there. Just being there reminds us that intimacy is not something saved for “special occasions”. It is something we build in everyday connection. Naturism strips away the noise so the spark can breathe.
Just a spontaneous moment of something new can be so much fun. We were playing in the pool one day and for fun, we tried to kiss underwater for the first time for a photo. If you have never tried this, it is not as easy as you think. Unless it’s just a small peck of course. But a normal kiss when your mouth fills with water became a hilarious personal moment between us.

Sensuality Isn’t the Enemy of Naturism
Let’s get something straight: sensuality is not the same as sexuality. But it’s just as important.
Naturism is deeply sensual. The feel of wind on skin, the warmth of sun on your back, the softness of your partner’s touch when there’s nothing between you. It’s about presence in the body and in each other’s presence. Naturism does not deny attraction, it refines it. You’re not chasing idealized images or relying on costumes. You’re learning to connect through authenticity. Through mutual trust, timing, and emotional clarity.
Yes, sexual feelings exist, and we are not ashamed of them. But in naturism, those feelings are respected, not flaunted. They belong in private, consensual spaces, not public gatherings. Just like in the clothed world. Common sense doesn’t vanish when clothes do.
Let’s Stop Pretending Naturists Are Asexual (or Hypersexual)
In trying to protect naturism’s reputation, we’ve overcorrected. We repeat “non-sexual” so often it starts to sound like “non-sexual people.” But let’s get real. Most naturists are not asexual. We’re not all celibate. We love. We flirt. We connect. We’re just not using nudity as a sexual prop for show.
On the flip side, there’s another growing problem. Those in the “sex positive” space who try to hijack naturism for their own agenda. They blur the lines, oversexualize nudity, and claim that we’re prudish for expecting boundaries.
They’re wrong, too.
Naturism doesn’t need to apologize for not being an open-sex culture. That’s not what it’s about. Nudity doesn’t equal invitation. It never has. Just like being fully clothed doesn’t mean you’re closed off.
There’s a powerful middle ground and that’s where true naturism lives. We can be body-positive and boundary-aware. We can be deeply intimate and publicly respectful. We don’t need to swing to either extreme of shame nor shock.
Naturism at its best honors affection without exhibitionism. It reframes how desire is expressed through dignity, care, and mutual respect. It welcomes love, connection, even sensuality. But it also knows where the line is, and why that line matters. And if we don’t defend that space, we lose what makes naturism safe and meaningful in the first place.
Let’s talk about subtle intimacy. Flirting does not disappear. It just evolves. Because no, naturist couples don’t stop being playful. We just get creative. It might be a certain look from across the pool. A passing touch on the lower back. A wink, a smirk, a shared inside joke. In naturist life, subtlety becomes powerful. Just one glance can say everything. Even the silly stuff stays with us. Maybe it’s a cheeky inconspicuous mooning while hanging out at a BBQ. Or that spontaneous “boob flash” just to get a smile. Naturism doesn’t strip away fun, it invites it. It gives us more space to enjoy each other, not less.
And yes… we still love lingerie, because it’s not everyday wear anymore. In private, that shift from “naturally nude” to “intentionally dressed” adds surprise and excitement. It’s different. It’s special. And it reminds us: being nude is normal. Being sexual is personal.

We Didn’t Lose the Spark. We Burned Away the Noise.
You don’t need clothes to keep things exciting. You need honesty. Intention. Stillness. Playfulness. Vulnerability. Presence. The spark does not live in novelty. It lives in noticing. When you actually see your partner, not as a role or a fantasy, but as a whole, breathing, beautiful being, the fire doesn’t fade. It shifts. Deepens. Strengthens.
It gave us new ways to connect, new reasons to appreciate each other, and new ways to feel close. It removed the distractions and let us rediscover the joy of simply being together.
Not because we were hiding anything. But because we stopped needing to. We didn’t become less intimate because we’re nude more often. We became more honest. More open. More in love with what’s real.
Naturism didn’t take away the desire… it burned away the bullshit!
If you missed any of this five part series, you go back to Part 1 Naturism as a Couple here.
We hope you enjoy our human experiences in naturism. Please share, like, leave a comment and subscribe to get notified when we post something new. You can also Buy us a coffee if you liked our article!
14 Comments
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I appreciate your article and the balance that it provides this discussion. A balanced view is sorely needed on this topic and you’ve done very well to shed light on it here.
However, this article is the first time I’ve seen sex positivity conflated with swinging or the open-sex culture, and this needs to be called out. They are not the same. Sex positivity is a movement that strives against decades of cultural and religious baggage that sees sexuality itself as an immoral and shameful activity in any context. Sex positivity honors and promotes an appropriate time and place for such activity, but without the shame and guilt that many couples of past and present generations feel and have felt in the bedroom. However, swingers, as you point out, take it too far into the zone of shock and libertinism. Sex positivity stands with us in the middle between shame and shock, as they have for some time now.
Thank you again for this article, we appreciate the work you put into it and look forward to more.
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Thanks for your comment. There is major confusion out there as too what sex positive actually means. We asked this specific question on social media and received a multitude of different opinions. What sex positivity means to you may be very different from the next person. It is easy to look up the definition of sex positive and say that is it, just like looking up the definition of naturism and say that’s it also. But people try to skew the definitions to meet their own agendas. Therein lies the issue.
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Thank you for the post Kevin and Corin.I appreciate the points given.
My only gripe is with the point(s) in Let’s Stop Pretending Naturists Are Asexual (or Hypersexual
While I don’t know how many naturists are asexual, I believe there could be some who are within the asexual and aromantic spectrum. I don’t think they are cold. They are humans just like us – they just have don’t experience love the same way most people do.
Just sharing my opinion on this. I wish you all the best.
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Appreciate the post, Kevin and Corin. At the same time, I’m curioys regarding the point(s) in Let’s Stop Pretending Naturists Are Asexual (or Hypersexual).
While not a majority imo, I believe there are some naturists who are part of the asexual and aromantic spectrum, and I don’t think they are cold. They are human beings, just like us – their love might be attached in an unconventional manner, outside amatonormativity. To put simply, they have little to no romantic feelings but they are not heartless. Generalizing is not doing any favors.
Just sharing my thoughts on this. I don’t have any ill intent.
I wish you well. Thanks for the post!
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I think that’s fair. A poor choice of words so I changed it. Thank you for pointing it out! 😊😊
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Another great segment Kevin and Corin. We firmly believe being naked and one with nature, increases sensuality and there should never be a limit to it. Life is too short. Jan&Gary
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Your articles always are insightful. Intimacy goes beyond physical. I wouldn’t say it was controversial.
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Thank you. It’s funny how some struggle with any sensuality between a couple.
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True
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What a great and ample presentation of the core values of naturism, of the advantages of clothes-free living.
/Anders, communicative Swedish 🇸🇪naturist
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Thank you very much!
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Another great blog Kevin. A really interesting take on naturism. I have always said that confidence is the greatest aphrodisiac, especially self confidence.

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