Originally Posted by piecenick
I have posted this before, but I like the topic, so I'll repeat myself. I worked at a marine facility, Mary was my assistant, she was 35-40, nice build, but just as typical working mom. One of Mary's duties was to show safety videos to vessel crew, so she would put on her PFD (life vest), hard hat and go to the vessels. One cold snowy, winter day she slipped on a patch of ice and fell in the water. She was right next to a ladder, so with the help of some crew, she was out of the water quickly.
My office was the closest to the dock, so they bring poor, wet, shivering Mary to my office. I wrap her in a blanket and call to the toolroom to bring a set of painters coveralls and another blanket to my office. Even with the heater on high she is still shivering and shook up from the fall, I tell her I am going to leave the room so she can get out of her wet clothes and the coveralls will be here in a few minutes.
In a shaky voice Mary says "Mr. Piecenick, you're going to have to help me, my hands are shaking so much I can't undo the buttons". Not what I wanted to hear, there were no other women employees nearby, so I closed my office door and undressed her. She was a real trooper, the toughest was peeling those wet, tight jeans off, I got her bra unclipped, I tried not to look and embarrass her. By this time someone knocked on my door, they had the coveralls, Mary was able to get her panties off and get in the coveralls by herself, not really decent, but the best I could do.
Company policy was she was to go to the ER to be checked out, luckily her husband met us at her house so she could get on decent clothes on and we all went to the ER. Later I told her I hope her husband wasn't upset about me helping her change, she just said he didn't need to know that part.
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