I've come to believe this is wrong for many people—perhaps most. The happiest, most productive period of my working life was also the one where the boundaries were most porous. Working from home, often without clothes, blurred the line between "work mode" and "life mode" in ways that reduced stress rather than increasing it. I didn't have to do a costume change, a mindset shift, and a commute just to start thinking about work problems. I simply walked from my bedroom to my desk and began.

To understand this longing, one must first look at what happens when the artificial boundaries of clothing are removed from a work environment. Clothing in the traditional corporate world acts as armor, a status symbol, and a tool for performance. We dress for the job we want, we wear power suits, and we constrict our bodies to fit an idealized image of professionalism. Naturist freedom work strips away this entire layer of performance. When you work nude—whether in a dedicated naturist co-working space, a remote home office, or a clothing-free community business—the hierarchy enforced by fashion completely vanishes. A CEO and an entry-level intern sit at their desks on equal physical terms. This structural equality fosters an environment of intense psychological safety, transparency, and mutual respect that clothed offices rarely achieve.

Naturism removes the social hierarchy imposed by fashion. When everyone is nude, you are stripped of your economic indicators, your brand preferences, and your curated persona. You are just a human being.