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           That probably happens more often than many would like
    to believe.  Several years ago I met a woman (who was delightfully
    "free" in expression of self) who told the group we were in
    that she had once felt the urge to go naked and did...the 
    difference was that it was on Stanford University's grounds
    in the middle of the day.  She had removed her clothes and was
    just strolling around until the campus police came and took
    her away.
           I was told by a friend one night that he had encountered
    a woman at an apartment complex strolling around late at night
    walking a dog, doing so in the nude.
           As a bit of a diversion to the topic, here at DEC the janitors have a
    utility room right next to the women's room that uses the same hallway
    entrance.  One day our secretary kept going in and coming back
    out and I made a crack about being "busy" and she responded that
    it was uncomfortable going to the bathroom while the janitor was
    in his utility room right next door.  What makes this interesting
    to me is that the last two days, Kelly & Kline on KWSS radio
    in the morning, have been getting listeners to "pee" into a toilet
    with the telephone there to broadcast to other listeners.  I am
    at work without a radio so I don't know how many callers they've
    had, but yesterday I got to listen to a man "peeing" and today
    I listened to a woman "peeing" (through my stereo speakers.) 
    Isn't it interesting how different people can be in different
    situations?  It isn't the act, it's the motivation that separates
    "rightness" from "wrongness."  Surely going naked in and of 
    itself should not be grounds for being judged...the context must
    have a great deal to do with it, if not most of it.
    
    Frederick
    
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   Re .0
   
      I did that exact thing about two years ago on my way home from (if my
   memory serves me well) a party at a friend's house. It was around 3am or
   so and I was about 4 miles from my house when I just felt like taking my
   clothes off while I was driving (at a very safe 30mph, and with no one to
   offend in sight). When I got home, I firsted stepped out of the car to get
   my mail then drove up the driveway and walked in the house, carrying my
   clothes in a bundle. Felt great!
   
   Re .1
   
   	> Isn't it interesting how different people can be in different
   	> situations?  It isn't the act, it's the motivation that separates
   	> "rightness" from "wrongness."  Surely going naked in and of 
   	> itself should not be grounds for being judged...the context must
   	> have a great deal to do with it, if not most of it.
   
      This past week I was staying at a hotel while away on training. On
   Tuesday night I went down to the hotel pool for a swim and an interesting
   thing occurred, which demonstrates your statement above.
   
      A group of people came into the pool area -- about 5 guys and one
   girl. Apparently, the girl did not know the hotel had a pool and so she
   was wearing a pair of swim trunks donated by one of her male friends and
   a yellow t-shirt (rather than a bathing suit). When she got in the water
   (and got the shirt wet) it became "clear" that she was not wearing any
   thing under the shirt. And, based on her conversations with her friends,
   she was well aware of the situation. In fact, she said "I know you can
   see everything, but I don't care."
   
      Well, during the entire time they were at the pool her friends kept
   prodding and joking with her to take the shirt off since it wasn't
   hiding anything. And she kept saying how they were probably right and
   how it was heavy and uncomfortable anyway. Finally, her friends got the
   shirt off of her during some water shenanigans (actually, they lifted it
   to about her shoulders and she took it off the rest of the way and threw
   it at one of the guys).
   
      As soon as the shirt was completely off, she wouldn't stand up in the
   pool. Although we had seen through the shirt previously, she now felt
   compelled to keep her breasts below the water line where they couldn't
   be seen. She swam around top-less for a few minutes while her friends
   tossed the shirt around and joked with her some more.
   
      When they realized she wasn't going to chase after them (or get out
   of the pool), they decided to give her back the shirt. And they even
   stood around her in the water while she was putting the shirt on, to form
   a barrier so that people wouldn't see her naked breasts while the shirt
   was going on.
   
      Guess what? When she got the shirt back on, she once again started
   standing up in the pool with her breasts visible through the shirt.
   
      This illustrates your point of how differently people act and how
   the context comes into play. Clearly the girl wasn't worried about all
   the guys (myself included, a complete stranger to her) seeing her breasts.
   But she didn't want anyone to see her NAKED breasts. As if the wet t-shirt
   somehow camouflaged what was there, or made things "all right".
   
      (Actually, the converstions she was having with her friends, while in
   a joking sense, where such that it sounded like they were all leaning
   towards taking their clothes off. I kind of knew they weren't serious
   about it, but was hoping they might so that I could then take my trunks
   off also. It isn't often that you get to go swimming nude when the
   temperature outside is below freezing. And I was dying for a nude swim!)
   
   
   Frank
   
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