Nudist Cruise
Book Details
Author(s)Hailey McPherson
PublisherJM Books
ISBN / ASINB00IWIX7KW
ISBN-13978B00IWIX7K5
Sales Rank540,239
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
2,000 nudists and one textile young woman on a 13 deck, 75,000 ton cruise ship sailing from Shanghai to Bangkok, with stops in China and Vietnam.
On the itinerary are such activities as swimming, miniature golf, karaoke, checkers. See a Las Vegas style musical stage show, eat in several award-winning international restaurants, pamper yourself in the luxury spa, exercise in the state of the art fitness center…all completely naked.
What happens when a shy young woman who was always taught to be ashamed of her body finds herself on a cruise ship full of nudists enjoying the sun and water and letting it all hang out?
An excerpt:
Before this trip, I knew absolutely nothing about nudists. I thought they were a bunch of hippies who run around naked, smoke pot and have wild orgies in the middle of a forest somewhere. I was wrong about everything except the running around naked part.
The people on that cruise had the ability to see nudity in a naturally innocent way, the way most children do before we are all told that nude is lewd. As a dancer, I can relate to that. I think we are all natural born dancers, but at some point in our childhood we are told to grow up and stop moving with natural joy. Most people forget how to dance and even professional dancers have to be trained all over again.
We talked and laughed, swam and played games, all completely naked. None of them noticed all the flaws I see in my body and no one laughed at anybody for being imperfect. When everybody is naked, no one cares about perfection. It took me a while to figure out that nudists don’t get nude to show off their imperfect bodies. They are not exhibitionists and they don’t like voyeurs. You are always welcome to join them, but they are not interested in being stared at. Something I figured out that the gymnophobes will never know is that the people you see nude are exactly the people you want to see naked. Instead of surgically enhanced bodies that conform to whatever this year’s definition of perfection is, they have natural, human bodies.
I was on a ship with 2,000 nudists. All of them were beautiful.
On the itinerary are such activities as swimming, miniature golf, karaoke, checkers. See a Las Vegas style musical stage show, eat in several award-winning international restaurants, pamper yourself in the luxury spa, exercise in the state of the art fitness center…all completely naked.
What happens when a shy young woman who was always taught to be ashamed of her body finds herself on a cruise ship full of nudists enjoying the sun and water and letting it all hang out?
An excerpt:
Before this trip, I knew absolutely nothing about nudists. I thought they were a bunch of hippies who run around naked, smoke pot and have wild orgies in the middle of a forest somewhere. I was wrong about everything except the running around naked part.
The people on that cruise had the ability to see nudity in a naturally innocent way, the way most children do before we are all told that nude is lewd. As a dancer, I can relate to that. I think we are all natural born dancers, but at some point in our childhood we are told to grow up and stop moving with natural joy. Most people forget how to dance and even professional dancers have to be trained all over again.
We talked and laughed, swam and played games, all completely naked. None of them noticed all the flaws I see in my body and no one laughed at anybody for being imperfect. When everybody is naked, no one cares about perfection. It took me a while to figure out that nudists don’t get nude to show off their imperfect bodies. They are not exhibitionists and they don’t like voyeurs. You are always welcome to join them, but they are not interested in being stared at. Something I figured out that the gymnophobes will never know is that the people you see nude are exactly the people you want to see naked. Instead of surgically enhanced bodies that conform to whatever this year’s definition of perfection is, they have natural, human bodies.
I was on a ship with 2,000 nudists. All of them were beautiful.

