is the human who has shed the costume. Not for provocation, but for peace. The nudist knows that the most radical thing you can do on a Tuesday afternoon is play volleyball without a label on your waistband. Stripped of logos, rank, and the armor of fashion, the nudist becomes just a body—fallible, warm, unremarkably remarkable. They say: Shame is learned. Freedom is unlearned.
Perhaps that is the secret of the title. Not a non sequitur, but a recipe: Take one machine of modest motion. Plant a field of unwavering attention. Remove all unnecessary covering. Wait for summer. Scooters Sunflowers Nudists
is the vehicle of controlled velocity. It is the machine of childhood made practical for adults: foldable, electric, leaning into a turn with the quiet hum of efficiency. Unlike a car, a scooter exposes you. You feel the wind on your shins, the grain of the pavement. It says: You don’t need a heavy chassis to move through the world. Lightness is a form of courage. is the human who has shed the costume
At first glance, the three words seem like a surrealist cut-up—a random shuffle of a summer day’s deck. But look closer. Scooters, sunflowers, nudists are not strangers. They are cousins, bound by a single, vibrating thread: the pursuit of unarmored joy. Stripped of logos, rank, and the armor of
Imagine a field at the edge of a town. A dirt path curves through it. On that path, a rests against a wooden fence—battery dead, kicked aside by someone who decided to walk the rest of the way. Behind the fence, a riot of sunflowers leans drunkenly toward the afternoon. Their petals are the color of egg yolks and old gold. And beyond them, on a private stretch of riverbank, three nudists are playing cards at a picnic table. One is sunburned on the shoulders. Another is pouring lemonade. They are laughing about something that happened yesterday.