My awareness of a pleasant warm-wetness of the gusset of my ooh-la-la organic thong is surpassed by a sensation of the nerves contracting in my groin ... his finger is touching me oh so wonderfully.
It started in the slack-time before Christmas with a Facebook recommendation to join the No-Pants Subway Ride! group. It sounded intriguing. I am not an exhibitionist, but enjoy good fun. I have been a little apprehensive initially, considering the recent New York Post report on the intentions to clamp down on subway nudity. There has been this report about 'naked art' on train L. People assume strange semi-nude mannerisms of, for example, having a tattoo-like drawing on some body part, of an artefact held in the hand. Another report about a man than fondled himself on the subway and another that masturbated. The most daring of reports, a photographer is accompanied by his volunteer model, who quickly disrobes when given a signal, to pose nude among commuters. The photographer fires off a number of shots of the model in various revealing positions, where after the model quickly dresses. The photographer subsequently held an exhibition of his favourite Nude Yorkers.
I discovered that the ninth No-Pants Subway Ride is an annual organised event that already spread to 22 cities around the world. In New York, where it started, the 2009 event had about 1200 supporters, equal numbers in gender, of all ages that spread out over four subway lines. I decided to join a group of women that I know to partake on Sunday 10 January 2010. We agreed to meet at a pub near the assembly point and go as a group.
There were all kinds of no-long-pants: boxer shorts, boy shorts, Lycra gym pants, swimming trunks, bikini bottoms, hipster hot-pants, fitted briefs, body shirts, teddies, some short skirts (with panties), jockeys, even y-fronts, thongs, T-backs and some g-strings. There were every conceivable colour, lots of different patterns, pictures, and slogans. Fabric varied, including, for example, cotton, silk, synthetic, some lace and not too revealing mesh. It had been quite a spectacle to observe, but the idea behind No-Pants Subway Ride is to permeate the ordinary commuters and act nonchalantly—as if nothing is extraordinary—which is what the few thousand participants set out to do. Once we boarded a subway, I took out a book that I took along and started reading.