Honestly, I agree that they aren't all young and babe material and that's about as far as I'll go, too. I can't be so sure what definition, or concept of spirituality much of this is out to express. There is a whole lot of it that just doesn't seem to make the grade at all. On the other hand, most of it probably doesn't make much of a grade as being pornography. I flipped quickly through give or take six pages before I'd had more than enough.
It is a nice bathroom isn't it. The marble top and burl is a wonderful touch.
Jbee
I'm not sure what "spiritual" has to do with the photos of thousands of naked or partly naked females. Perhaps it reassures the "amateur" women that its OK to be seen just as themselves without the cultural cover.
There are many sites similar to this with photos of naked females. Many of the females on many sites are older women who, perhaps like us, have finally gotten over some of the conformity of youth. One of the conclusions I draw from so many naked women on Internet is that there is a deep human desire to be seen and accepted just as a human being, without all the cover that prevents us from being seen for who we are.
Photo web sites attract thousands, tens of thousands, or perhaps even millions in total by now of women who volunteer or send in their pictures.
Nude Spirituality shows over 3,000 pages with maybe 10 photos per page. That's 30,000 women who chose to go internet public naked. Some of them were professional women who got paid for their photos but many were just women who wanted to be seen naked. And there must be thousands of naked photo web sites.
Somewhere in the psychology of conformity and the "its just right' to be covered all the time, is a deep desire to be seen as "JUST ME." Web photographers make it OK. They give permission. and the Iphone selfies have been making it more possible. Young people are sending naked photos to each other because of the same human psychology.
Some years ago, before Internet, there was this photographer in Denver who wanted a couple of nude models for some magazine pictures, so he put an advertisement out in a local alternate paper. He got hundreds of women wanting to be photographed and published naked, including teens with parent's for chaperones. Eventually he was arrested and charged with over 800 counts of breaking their local obscenity laws. Courts tossed all the charges on "art" and "free speech" grounds. The message I got was the overwhelming number of women who wanted to be seen naked by the world when given permission and opportunity.
While I generally don't waste time on "porn" web sites the whole phenomenon of sharing one's naked self in photos (and viewing naked photos) makes it more acceptable to be seen naked. Every view of naked people on Internet, and every naked selfie shared by every teen or granny is a rip in the fabric of compulsory clothing.
Sure, everybody is not doing it yet. Some still are deep into conformity and avoid cognitive dissonance by avoiding the thought that being naked might be acceptable or even better. But despite that group there are millions now who are somewhere naked on the Internet, and probably in their back yard too.
Spiritual blessings to us all.
Bob