My Swimming Trunks Have Been Sucked Off 〈2024-2026〉
If your waistband is loose (more than two fingers of slack), you are wearing a sail. When the water pulls the back of your shorts, the front acts like a lever, peeling the waistband over your hips in 0.3 seconds. First Response: What To Do When You Are Suddenly Exposed So, you’ve uttered the terrible words: My swimming trunks have been sucked off. You are now treading water in a public pool, feeling a draft where no draft should be.
Go to the pool manager. Do not be embarrassed. I said, “Excuse me, sir… the drain ate my rubber ducks.” He laughed, walked to the pump room, and opened the filter canister. There they were—wadded up, wet, but intact. My Swimming Trunks Have Been Sucked Off
We have all had bad days at the pool. A belly flop that stings for hours. A diving board mishap that ends with a wedgie of epic proportions. But until last Tuesday, I considered myself immune to the specific, soul-crushing horror that can only be described by the phrase: If your waistband is loose (more than two
Then, the pump cycled on.
They handed them to me on a mop handle. I have never pulled on a pair of shorts faster in my life. If you are reading this because your swimming trunks have been sucked off, take heart. In the grand spectrum of public humiliation, this is a 7/10 for embarrassment but a 1/10 for actual harm. No one remembers the naked guy for more than five minutes—unless he does a naked lap. Don’t do that. You are now treading water in a public
When water moves fast, pressure drops. The pump creates high-velocity water flow entering the drain. The stagnant water inside your trunks is at higher pressure. Nature abhors a pressure difference, so it tries to equalize by shoving your shorts into the low-pressure zone.
If you are reading this because you just typed those exact words into Google—panicked, water-logged, and questioning every life choice that led you to that specific pool filter—take a deep breath. You are not alone. This article is your lifeline. Let me set the scene. It was a sweltering 95-degree afternoon at the local aquatic center. I was minding my own business, floating lazily above the main drain at the deep end of the pool. For the uninitiated, the main drain is a large, circular grate at the bottom of the pool designed to circulate water to the filtration system.