Thursday, 9 April 2026

The nylon python

 Ever since I can remember, I have been afflicted with the kind of shoulders a bra strap must slip off. It's annoying, so annoying in fact that I recall my sister-in-law schooling my niece on how dreadful my slipping straps are and how she must take care not to be like Aunty Kylie. If I have had no other use in life, I have demonstrated the sartorial horror of the falling strap.

In order to combat this problem, I sometimes wear a racer back sports bra. Now the issue with these is that they don't have any clips so they have to go on over my head.

Forgive me the technicalities but I need to set this scene.

Even though it is now April and officially mid-autumn, Sydney is still warm and humid so sticky skin is very much a normal state of being.

This morning I was already running late for work when I finished showering. I knew it was going to be tricky getting a bra on so I left it to almost last, trying to make sure I was at the lowest possible level of clammy.

I dragged it over my head and immediately knew I was in trouble. It was twisted and coiled like an old telephone cord. The band, which should sit flat against ribcage was twisted and stuck and the rest of the fabric was twisted and stuck with it. At the front I could drag it into a semi-correct position but the tension caused by the twisting pulled it up so that it was cutting under my arms and barely below my collar at the back.

I twisted and squirmed, arms reaching over my head then up from my waist. I couldn't reach it with more than a finger tip. I just could not get the thing unstuck. Then more I twisted, the sweatier I got. It was a losing battle. Should I take it off and start over? I was already late and there was no guarantee I would be any more successful.

No, I would gather my stuff and head off. Maybe I could wiggle it down in the car. 

At the first set of lights, which can be a long, long wait I dragged my shirt up a bit to try freeing the dreadful fabric coil from my armpits. I wasn't exposed in any indecent way but it was still pretty awkward when I made eye contact with the young tradie in the ute next to me. 

Onto plan B.

For the rest of the drive, the nylon python coiled around me, cutting in oddly to make new asymmetrical shapes of my body, rolling itself tighter and creeping into positions bras should not go.

When I pulled up at work, there was just a small chance that I could clock on in the five minute grace period. Ignoring the nylon python and the synthetic uniform shirt clinging and creeping up my back, I grabbed my stuff and high tailed it to the clock, hoping not to meet anybody in the lift.

I clocked in and said a very quick hello to my office buddy, hoping my clattering bags would distract her from my appearance, then back tracked to the bathroom.

Now that I had calmed down, clocked in and cooled off in the air conditioning, it took just a quick hook of a finger and a little smooth down to restore comfort and shape.

The body strangling nylon python had been subdued into boring bra-dom.


18 comments:

  1. A great account Kylie and - I am sorry about this - but funny too! Finding the right words - not so easy. A tricky tale to tell.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Neil. It was time for something light and life delivered the story!

      Delete
  2. I was laughing because I live in the Deep South and summertime is incredibly humid. The joke here is after taking a shower and getting dressed you need another shower. I have experienced the same and I think I like the nylon python term better than what I call a clothing injury.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I knew you would feel my pain! A clothing injury is a good description. May your days be dry and your nights cool ๐Ÿ™‚

      Delete
  3. Oh lord snap! I can't wear regular bras either as the straps fight me in their attempt to escape to a better place. I've been wearing sports bras for years. A tip for getting them on. Pull the straps upwards to undo the mad coiling, and then pull down from the back. Works every time.
    But I laughed in recognition. I remember one time walking through a school (I was their accountant), feeling good, only for a student to walk into my office and point at one boob which had escaped the bra and was trying to escape for dear life down my front.
    I was red-faced for the rest of the day. There had been MANY students in the halls.
    XO
    WWW

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for the tip! It makes a lot of sense.
      Oh dear! Haha kids notice everything!

      Delete
  4. I remember a podcast featuring Wendy Harmer and Angela Catterns talking about the experience of buying a professionally fitted bra. As you may guess, I know nothing about the subject, but after listening to what they said, it made a lot of sense. I expect this costs a good bit of money though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Andrew,
      A proper fitting might make all the difference!

      Delete
  5. Two choices really:
    A) smaller women can go without a bra and
    B) larger women can wear form-fitting strapless bras.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Hels,
      I'm sure there are alternatives, I just don't like them!
      It would also be a good idea to run on time instead of perennially late

      Delete
  6. Hello Kylie
    I had a sympathetic groan about the nylon python. I loathe bras and only wear one when I am ‘going to town’ or we have visitors or are visiting. This is a lifelong distaste and when I was a young woman I could get away with no bra and often be taken for a young man, which I loved! However, post children there is no disguising the fact that I am a woman. Thanks for the levity about a problem that many women face. Good luck with a solution. Cheers, Helen

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ah yes, Helen, I also loved it when I could choose to look androgynous. These days I look matronly, which is ok.
      I thought it was only me who got into these crazy situations but maybe it's more about the bras.

      Delete
  7. I'm very glad that as a man I don't need a bra. I've heard so many stories from women about what a bloody nuisance they are and how they remove their bra at the earliest opportunity. Hopefully there won't be a repeat performance any time soon!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I bend the rules,Nick: once the thing is on, I hesitate to remove it.
      There will be repeats but hopefully much faster resolution

      Delete
  8. This is exactly why I don't buy that style and also why I have trouble getting into swimsuits. Sweaty clammy all over. I have reasonably square shoulders so any slipping bra strap usually means the length-holding clip has slipped and needs adjusting so the strap is the correct length.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. River, I might do better to replace mine more often.
      Swimmers can be tricky but I haven't worn any for so long I forgot

      Delete
  9. I shouldn't have laughed at your dilemma, but I only did so in sympathy, not ridicule. When I was recovering from a shoulder injury my daughter bought me a nursing bra from Best and Less that did up at the front and was great for limited mobility. In fact, it was so great, that five years later i still wear it as my "at home" bra.
    i was a very late bloomer chest-wise, now I wish they were smaller and perkier, but they have done a great job nourishing four kids, so i am thankful for their service even if they don't sit where I would like them to.
    Megan

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Megan, I wanted to make people laugh and it was a problem i made for myself so thank you ๐Ÿ˜Š
      Breastfeeding (and raising) four is a great achievement and aren't women amazing!

      Delete

go on, leave a comment or four.