In hostels or military barracks, expensive technical lingerie (e.g., sports bras, silk underwear) is frequently stolen. A small cable lock (like a bicycle combination lock) can be threaded through the waistband or leg openings and secured to a bed frame or locker handle.
Bicycle locks are a necessary annoyance for urban cyclists. But what about carriers? People improvise — backpacks, U-lock holsters, under-seat bags, belt clips — and one cheeky idea that pops up in forums is hiding a small cable or chain lock inside underwear. Here’s a practical, safety-minded look at that idea: when it might make sense, why it’s usually a bad plan, and better alternatives that give the same benefits without the downsides. Bicycle Lock On Panties
In high-risk environments (fieldwork, disaster relief camps), a locked undergarment can serve as a physical barrier to non-consensual removal. While not impenetrable, it raises the effort required and can act as a psychological deterrent. But what about carriers