Here is the third installment of my Daily Naturist Living series, following The Only Outfit I Wear Every Day (Naturally!) and My Morning Routine (Naked, Naturally). This series explores how naturism isn’t just for holidays or weekends—it’s a true lifestyle, to be lived every single day.
Why dress up just to do what nobody enjoys?
Let’s be honest: no one loves chores.
But if I’m going to scrub, sweep, fold, or vacuum—I’m doing it naked.
Not because it’s more fun. Not because it’s sexy. But because… why not?
If I’m just moving around the house cleaning, I see zero reason to put on a pair of shorts that’ll end up in the laundry five minutes later. I live naked—really live naked—which means I also do the boring stuff in the nude.
Yes, I vacuum naked.
Yes, I clean the toilet naked.
Yes, I fold laundry naked (though none of it’s mine).
Yes, I prune the rosemary naked.
It’s not about making a statement. It’s about staying comfortable, staying connected, and—let’s be honest—reducing the laundry load.
Chores Are Lighter Without Clothes
No sweaty T-shirt sticking to my back. No waistband riding up while I reach behind the couch. No heat-trapping fabric as I mop the floor. Naked, I move freely. I don’t overheat. I don’t feel restricted. It’s just me, doing what needs to be done—skin to air, task to task.
There’s a lightness to it. A strange kind of joy.
It makes even vacuuming feel less like a burden and more like movement. Like flow.
Okay, almost.
The Outdoors Counts Too
In spring and summer, I take it outside. Gardening naked is an entirely different sensory experience. Kneeling in the soil, feeling the sun on my back, hearing the bees nearby—it doesn’t get more natural than that. I always wear clogs for safety and throw on a hat if the sun’s intense. But the rest of me? Free to stretch, bend, weed, water, and sweat without a single synthetic barrier.
And when I wash the veggies afterward, still naked? That’s the full-circle moment. Dirt to plate, all in the same skin.
Yes, It’s Practical
Doing chores naked isn’t about making a point. It’s about practicality. Why dress up just to break a sweat wiping windows or scrubbing the tub? Why change clothes just to sort through the laundry of others?
If anything, naturist living makes chores feel less annoying. There’s a built-in simplicity. No outfit prep. No post-cleaning outfit change. Just you, the task, and your natural self.
Naturism Isn’t Just for Leisure. It’s for Living.
If you think naturism is just about lounging poolside or walking nude in the woods, think again. It’s folding, scrubbing, and rinsing. It’s emptying the dishwasher. It’s real life—without the extra layers.
Try it.
Next time you’ve got a vacuum in one hand and a sigh in the other, take off your clothes first. Feel the breeze. Hear the whirr. Watch your limbs move unfiltered. See what changes.
And if you’re already a naturist, you know:
The clothes are never missed. The chores still get done.
But the feeling? It’s better.
Get Nude, Stay Nude, Live Nude and Share the Nude Love!
I love this. I’ve already been doing it some, and your essay will increase that. Good stuff.