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Noe ( 10 years ago )
Hey there and thank you in your information – I have dfeinitely picked up something new from here. I did experience several technical problems using this website, as I needed to reload the web site lots of times previous to get it to load correctly. I have been wondering if your hosting is OK? Now not that I'm complaining, however slow loading instances instances will often affect your placement in google and can injury your quality ranking of ads and with Adwords. Well I’m including this RSS to my e-mail and will out for much more of your respective intriguing content. Make sure you update this once more soon..
Esra ( 10 years ago )
Hey there and thank you in your information – I have dleinitfey picked up something new from here. I did experience several technical problems using this website, as I needed to reload the web site lots of times previous to get it to load correctly. I have been wondering if your hosting is OK? Now not that I'm complaining, however slow loading instances instances will often affect your placement in google and can injury your quality ranking of ads and with Adwords. Well I’m including this RSS to my e-mail and will out for much more of your respective intriguing content. Make sure you update this once more soon..
Thanasis ( 10 years ago )
or how they have responded to us, we tend to invset a lot of value into the opinions of others. But, in the end, it is our own responsbility to affirm ourselves regardless of what others may think or do. One of the great gifts I hear many nudist say they receive as a nudist is a sense of self acceptance. Nature doesn't make junk. Living life does gives wear and tear. Never, never ask me to believe that a woman missing a breast because of life saving surgery is somehow now broken. Yes, nature does experiment and sometimes we could be shocked into a new awareness by all the ways that nature does experiment. Most of us never see or imagine all of what that may be. Yet, as a community we pride ourselves on our ability to transcend and to accept and therefore affirm. In the giving, we receive and that process gives us a sense of self that speaks very highly of who we are. No shame, no guilt a community that should proudly state that we are where our ancesters were and where our collected future should be going back towards.
Luis ( 10 years ago )
Namaste,To me, body acceptance is a two fold issue. First, it means to me that it is not my place to judge oetrhs' bodies, precisely because those are *their* bodies. If I had no eyes with which to see, or hands with which to feel, would I judge their bodies? Probably not. Their health, their size, their genetic makeup, what they eat or don't eat- these are none of my business. I believe that people ought to have dominion over their own bodies. I also acknowledge that some people live in food deserts,' and so have varying degrees of access to healthcare, food choices, etc. Shaming people into looking a certain way is harmful. Second, body acceptance- of my own body- means that I must accept my body today as it is, regardless of its imperfections, however real or perceived. It means that I will not abuse my body to force it to conform to some ideal. I will not equate size or shape with health. It means that I prioritize emotional and psychological health, and recognize that while physical health is important, and affect psychology, it is not to be based on looks. Blood-work, bones scans, and such are between my doctor and me, and I should follow physician recommendations, based on my medical needs.This is the only body I have, it belongs only to me. Your body is your own. Judgement based on looks is unnecessary.xo
William ( 10 years ago )
, discussion on this topic is ceaitrnly appropriate since the current state of the AANR membership mirrors that of American society as a whole, meaning far too many of us are seriously overweight. It is particularly ironic for the AANR membership to have this problem, given that the modern nudist movement was founded on principles of wellness and hygiene. Additionally, I believe our emphasis on “body acceptance” helps mask the problem and almost encourages a failure to recognize and deal with this serious health issue and all the myriad serious medical conditions that accompany it. You and I may “accept” your body in a spirit of community, good cheer, non-judgmentalism, and tolerance, but obesity remains a serious (perhaps mortal) threat to your health. “Body acceptance” won’t save you from Metabolic Syndrome.Each month in The Bulletin, and in our activities in camp, we see lots of smiling people with serious weight issues. Do these people choose to be obese? I believe in most cases, they do not, and would prefer to be of normal weight. The problem is not desire; I suspect many of these people have tried, perhaps repeatedly, the conventional wisdom “calories in, calories out” approach of extreme diets and draconian exercise regimens, and have found these methods unsustainable over the long term, and thus largely ineffective or even counter-productive, as exercise stimulates more of an appetite. I would suggest these folks are obese because they don’t understand why they are obese, and thus have no idea for how to get lean. What is needed is a new (actually, old) approach, one that recognizes the problem as one of hormonal and metabolic disturbance caused by one’s mode of eating. There is plenty of evidence that the bulk of the answer, for most people at least, is a proper diet, avoiding grains (especially wheat in all its forms), sugar, unhealthy heavily processed vegetable oils, fried foods, and easily digestible carbohydrates. In other words, avoiding what composes the bulk of the modern American diet. In place of these, we should eat meats, fish, leafy vegetables, some tubers, nuts, good quality cheese, etc.By being courageous enough to challenge the conventional wisdom on obesity, and to stop obsessing about dietary fat, and instead to start worrying (a lot) about carbohydrate, you may be amazed at your weight loss and banishment of “that stubborn belly fat”, particularly if your diet changes are combined with a sensible, moderate, and sustainable level of increased physical activity. All the authors listed below make a simple suggestion – faithfully try the dietary/activity changes suggested for a month or two or three, and if you don’t feel better and haven’t lost some weight (maybe quite a bit of weight), you can always go back to what you were doing before.I would challenge AANR to promote a return to our roots in the area of hygiene; let’s make 2013 the year to emphasize fitness and weight loss - a return to health. For much more detailed information, I would suggest reference to the following:1.“Wheat Belly” by William Davis, M.D.2.“The Paleo Blueprint” by Mark Sisson3. “Why We Get Fat, and What To Do About It” by Gary Taubes4. “The Paleo Solution – The Original Human Diet” by Robb Wolf5. “Good Calories, Bad Calories – Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Weight Control, and Disease” by Gary Taubes
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Text comments (5)
Hey there and thank you in your information – I have dfeinitely picked up something new from here. I did experience several technical problems using this website, as I needed to reload the web site lots of times previous to get it to load correctly. I have been wondering if your hosting is OK? Now not that I'm complaining, however slow loading instances instances will often affect your placement in google and can injury your quality ranking of ads and with Adwords. Well I’m including this RSS to my e-mail and will out for much more of your respective intriguing content. Make sure you update this once more soon..
Hey there and thank you in your information – I have dleinitfey picked up something new from here. I did experience several technical problems using this website, as I needed to reload the web site lots of times previous to get it to load correctly. I have been wondering if your hosting is OK? Now not that I'm complaining, however slow loading instances instances will often affect your placement in google and can injury your quality ranking of ads and with Adwords. Well I’m including this RSS to my e-mail and will out for much more of your respective intriguing content. Make sure you update this once more soon..
or how they have responded to us, we tend to invset a lot of value into the opinions of others. But, in the end, it is our own responsbility to affirm ourselves regardless of what others may think or do. One of the great gifts I hear many nudist say they receive as a nudist is a sense of self acceptance. Nature doesn't make junk. Living life does gives wear and tear. Never, never ask me to believe that a woman missing a breast because of life saving surgery is somehow now broken. Yes, nature does experiment and sometimes we could be shocked into a new awareness by all the ways that nature does experiment. Most of us never see or imagine all of what that may be. Yet, as a community we pride ourselves on our ability to transcend and to accept and therefore affirm. In the giving, we receive and that process gives us a sense of self that speaks very highly of who we are. No shame, no guilt a community that should proudly state that we are where our ancesters were and where our collected future should be going back towards.
Namaste,To me, body acceptance is a two fold issue. First, it means to me that it is not my place to judge oetrhs' bodies, precisely because those are *their* bodies. If I had no eyes with which to see, or hands with which to feel, would I judge their bodies? Probably not. Their health, their size, their genetic makeup, what they eat or don't eat- these are none of my business. I believe that people ought to have dominion over their own bodies. I also acknowledge that some people live in food deserts,' and so have varying degrees of access to healthcare, food choices, etc. Shaming people into looking a certain way is harmful. Second, body acceptance- of my own body- means that I must accept my body today as it is, regardless of its imperfections, however real or perceived. It means that I will not abuse my body to force it to conform to some ideal. I will not equate size or shape with health. It means that I prioritize emotional and psychological health, and recognize that while physical health is important, and affect psychology, it is not to be based on looks. Blood-work, bones scans, and such are between my doctor and me, and I should follow physician recommendations, based on my medical needs.This is the only body I have, it belongs only to me. Your body is your own. Judgement based on looks is unnecessary.xo
, discussion on this topic is ceaitrnly appropriate since the current state of the AANR membership mirrors that of American society as a whole, meaning far too many of us are seriously overweight. It is particularly ironic for the AANR membership to have this problem, given that the modern nudist movement was founded on principles of wellness and hygiene. Additionally, I believe our emphasis on “body acceptance” helps mask the problem and almost encourages a failure to recognize and deal with this serious health issue and all the myriad serious medical conditions that accompany it. You and I may “accept” your body in a spirit of community, good cheer, non-judgmentalism, and tolerance, but obesity remains a serious (perhaps mortal) threat to your health. “Body acceptance” won’t save you from Metabolic Syndrome.Each month in The Bulletin, and in our activities in camp, we see lots of smiling people with serious weight issues. Do these people choose to be obese? I believe in most cases, they do not, and would prefer to be of normal weight. The problem is not desire; I suspect many of these people have tried, perhaps repeatedly, the conventional wisdom “calories in, calories out” approach of extreme diets and draconian exercise regimens, and have found these methods unsustainable over the long term, and thus largely ineffective or even counter-productive, as exercise stimulates more of an appetite. I would suggest these folks are obese because they don’t understand why they are obese, and thus have no idea for how to get lean. What is needed is a new (actually, old) approach, one that recognizes the problem as one of hormonal and metabolic disturbance caused by one’s mode of eating. There is plenty of evidence that the bulk of the answer, for most people at least, is a proper diet, avoiding grains (especially wheat in all its forms), sugar, unhealthy heavily processed vegetable oils, fried foods, and easily digestible carbohydrates. In other words, avoiding what composes the bulk of the modern American diet. In place of these, we should eat meats, fish, leafy vegetables, some tubers, nuts, good quality cheese, etc.By being courageous enough to challenge the conventional wisdom on obesity, and to stop obsessing about dietary fat, and instead to start worrying (a lot) about carbohydrate, you may be amazed at your weight loss and banishment of “that stubborn belly fat”, particularly if your diet changes are combined with a sensible, moderate, and sustainable level of increased physical activity. All the authors listed below make a simple suggestion – faithfully try the dietary/activity changes suggested for a month or two or three, and if you don’t feel better and haven’t lost some weight (maybe quite a bit of weight), you can always go back to what you were doing before.I would challenge AANR to promote a return to our roots in the area of hygiene; let’s make 2013 the year to emphasize fitness and weight loss - a return to health. For much more detailed information, I would suggest reference to the following:1.“Wheat Belly” by William Davis, M.D.2.“The Paleo Blueprint” by Mark Sisson3. “Why We Get Fat, and What To Do About It” by Gary Taubes4. “The Paleo Solution – The Original Human Diet” by Robb Wolf5. “Good Calories, Bad Calories – Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Weight Control, and Disease” by Gary Taubes