Monday, May 11, 2026

Studies do exist on women smelling their romantic partner's worn clothing (usually T-shirts) and its effects: "jockstraps"

 “Twenty-one years on the council. One spray park. And, when the Harlem Globetrotters needed their dirty uniforms and jockstraps washed in 2023, Councilwoman Ortiz personally loaded them up and took care of it.

East Topeka may still have the same potholes it had in 2005, but at least the Globetrotters left town with fresh drawers. That’s what we call leadership.”

The Quick Facts

In March 2023, the Harlem Globetrotters and Washington Generals were in Topeka for a game at the Stormont Vail Events Center. Their usual laundromat apparently treated them poorly (refused service or gave them a hard time after they showed up with bags of dirty gear post-game). Ortiz’s daughter posted about it online. Sylvia jumped in, apologized on behalf of Topeka, offered to handle it herself, waited for the team after the show/shower, loaded up all their stuff, and took it to Oakland Easy Wash to get it done.

Sylvia Ortiz: 21 Years of Showing Up… One Spray Park… and the Harlem Globetrotters’ Jockstraps

In local government, they say showing up is half the battle.

Sylvia Ortiz has perfected that half.

For the other half — you know, actually fixing anything in East Topeka — the neighborhood is still waiting after twenty-one years.

Since taking her seat on the Topeka City Council in 2005, Ortiz has become the longest-serving member in modern city history. She’s collected the plaques, survived every re-election (including that comfortable-but-not-exactly-inspiring 57% in 2025), and sat through more committee meetings than most people have hot dinners. Her official city bio proudly touts her deep East Topeka roots and Neighborhood Improvement Association days. Then it delivers the legacy:

“Sylvia is very proud of being a major stakeholder in creating the first spray park in Samuel Jackson Park.”

One splash pad. Built in 2011. Kids get misted. That’s the capstone achievement after two decades.

But wait — there’s more!

In 2023, when the Harlem Globetrotters rolled into town and their usual laundromat refused to wash their dirty uniforms, towels, and yes… the jockstraps and underwear, Councilwoman Ortiz personally stepped up. She loaded up all their filthy gear, hauled it to Oakland Easy Wash, and made sure the world-famous basketball entertainers left Topeka with fresh drawers. Local news treated it like a heartwarming act of small-town hospitality. And it was.

Twenty-one years. One spray park. And personally laundering the Globetrotters’ undergarments.

East Topeka may still be dodging the same potholes from 2005. Sidewalks are still optional in too many spots. Economic development remains a perpetual “priority.” Blight, housing, and youth issues stay on the wishlist. But at least the kids can run through recycled water jets, and the Globetrotters didn’t have to play their next game in crusty shorts.

That’s what we call leadership in District 3.

She entered politics because the previous councilmember ignored neighborhood concerns. Fair point. But after 21 years under her watch, many of those same concerns are still echoing through the same streets. Showing up? Undeniable A+. Delivering measurable change? The spray park and the laundry service say it all.

Half the battle is attendance. The other half is results.

District 3 got the perfect attendance trophy… a splash pad… and clean jockstraps for out-of-town celebrities.

The potholes? Still undefeated.


No dedicated scientific studies specifically examine whether women sniff men's underwear or dirty laundry while doing the laundry.

That scenario appears mostly in anecdotes, online discussions (Quora, Reddit, forums), and casual commentary rather than peer-reviewed research. It's often framed as a mix of curiosity, intimacy, hygiene checks, or occasional fetish behavior — but not something rigorously studied in a "laundry room" context.

Closest Actual Research

Studies do exist on women smelling their romantic partner's worn clothing (usually T-shirts) and its effects:

  • Stress reduction: A well-known 2018 University of British Columbia study (published in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology) had 96 women smell T-shirts worn by their male partner, a stranger, or a clean one. Women who smelled their partner's shirt reported lower stress (both psychologically and via cortisol levels) during and after a stressful task. Stranger scents increased stress. Researchers noted women generally have a keener sense of smell, which may play a role.
  • Similar findings appear in other work: Many women (over 80% in one older survey) report intentionally smelling an absent partner's clothing for comfort, relaxation, or emotional connection. Men do this less frequently.

These focus on emotional/physiological benefits of a partner's scent (familiarity, safety, possible oxytocin links), not routine laundry handling or underwear specifically.

Broader Context

  • Olfactory attraction research (e.g., "sweaty T-shirt" experiments) shows people rate others' body odors for compatibility (MHC genes, fertility cues), but that's lab-based sniffing of worn shirts, not laundry day.
  • Underwear sniffing as a fetish is discussed more for men (e.g., jockstrap or panty sniffing), with some anecdotal reports of women doing the reverse for arousal or intimacy. No large-scale studies quantify how common it is during chores.
  • Men are more often cited in surveys for "sniff tests" on their own clothes to decide if they need washing.

Bottom line: The stress-relief and bonding benefits of smelling a partner's worn clothes are real per studies, but the specific "women doing laundry → sniffing undies" trope lacks formal research. It's more pop psychology, humor, and personal stories than data. If it's happening, it's likely driven by individual intimacy/curiosity rather than a universal behavior science has pinned down.




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