And finally, the nudists.
Ah, the nudists. How they have been misunderstood. The popular imagination sees them as either hedonists or eccentrics, people who simply forgot to pack their swimsuits. But spend an afternoon at a nudist colony—a word that itself feels too clinical, too cold—and you will discover something startling: boredom. Not the tedious kind, but the profound boredom of people who have nothing to prove. Nudism, at its core, is not about sex. It is about the removal of social armor. Without the uniform of fashion—no logos, no power ties, no push-up bras, no ripped jeans signaling ironic poverty—you are left with just the human form in all its lumpy, saggy, freckled, stretch-marked glory. And here is the miracle: after the first ten minutes, you stop noticing the nudity. What remains is conversation. Community. Volleyball played with absurd earnestness. The nudist philosophy is radical simplicity: You were born enough. Everything else is costume. scooters and sunflowers and nudists
Of course, the cynic will laugh. They will say a scooter is impractical in the rain, that sunflowers die within a week, that nudists get sunburned in awkward places. And they are right. But that is precisely the point. Imperfection is the gateway to authenticity. The scooter breaks down; you learn patience. The sunflower wilts; you learn to appreciate the ephemeral. The nudist forgets sunscreen; you learn the tender art of aloe vera application. And finally, the nudists
If the scooter is a machine that teaches vulnerability, the sunflower is nature’s lesson in audacity. It does not grow cautiously. It does not apologize for its height. By late summer, it stands eight, ten, sometimes twelve feet tall, its face a dinner plate of gold, its seeds a Fibonacci spiral of infinite possibility. The sunflower practices a kind of solar worship called heliotropism—young blooms track the sun from east to west, drinking light as if light were water. But here is the secret: mature sunflowers stop moving. They fix their gaze permanently eastward, toward the dawn. They choose. They root themselves in a single direction, not out of laziness but out of conviction. The sunflower tells us: Grow where you are planted, but grow wildly. Turn toward what nourishes you. And when you find your light, stop chasing. Face it. The popular imagination sees them as either hedonists