Olya: Two friends search for a nude beach in Palanga, take a wrong turn, accidentally cross a regular beach naked, and end up meeting a handsome stranger in the cold Baltic water.
This story happened last summer in Palanga. My friend and I came to the seaside simply to rest: pine trees, dunes, a cool breeze, a long beach, and that feeling that on vacation you can be braver than you are at home.
At our hotel, we met two women from Riga. Over breakfast, they told us they had found a nude beach on the coast and now went only there.
“There’s a completely different feeling there,” one of them said. “Without a swimsuit, your body finally feels like it can breathe.”
I pretended to listen calmly, but something inside me immediately warmed up. The thought itself — lying naked on the sand, not hiding, feeling the sun with my whole body — was frightening and tempting at the same time.
My friend got excited instantly.
“We’re going,” she said.
“We are?”
“Of course. You can’t be afraid of your own skin forever.”
The next day, we got detailed directions from the women and went looking for that beach. The path turned out to be long and confusing: dunes, hollows, paths, pines, identical turns. I kept asking whether she was sure, and she kept answering:
“Relax. If we see naked people, we’re there.”
And then we really did see a girl coming out of the water. From a distance, she seemed completely nude.
“That’s it,” my friend said confidently. “We found it.”
We settled into a sandy hollow almost hidden between the dunes. The wind was cool, the sun kept appearing and disappearing, but there was no stopping us now. I took off my dress, then the top of my swimsuit, then the bottom — and suddenly I was completely naked among the sand and the sea.
The first sensation was like an electric shock.
My skin instantly became too sensitive. The wind touched my chest, stomach, thighs, back. The sand was warm under my feet. I tried to look calm, but inside everything was trembling: shame, excitement, fear, and that sweet thrill of doing something forbidden and not quite believing I had dared.
My friend undressed too and sat beside me.
“So now we are officially free women,” she said.
We sunbathed a little, laughed, played cards. But after a while, curiosity took over: where were all the nudists? We heard voices near the water, and my friend suggested:
“Let’s go swim. We’ll have a look.”
“Naked?”
“Why did we get undressed then?”
The water was far away. Our things stayed behind the dunes, but we decided that since this was a nude beach, everything was fine.
We came out of the hollow and walked toward the sea.
And almost immediately, we understood: something was wrong.
In the nearest hollow, a couple was lying down. The guy was wearing trunks. The girl was topless, but still wearing the bottom of her swimsuit. They looked at us as if we had stepped out of a dream. Farther on, there was another group. Dressed. Then a family under an umbrella. Then men with towels. And everyone was looking.
That was when I realized it.
We had the wrong beach.
We were two completely naked girls confidently walking across a regular beach toward the sea.
Heat rushed through me from head to toe. I wanted to disappear into the sand, turn around, run away, grab my towel — but our things were too far behind us. Going back across the whole beach was even scarier than reaching the water.
“Don’t stop,” my friend whispered.
“I’m going to die.”
“Then die beautifully.”
And we sped up.
The beach suddenly became very active. Several men apparently decided that exactly this moment was perfect for a swim. Someone got up from his towel. Someone pretended to look at the sea, though he was clearly not looking at the sea. I felt those glances on my skin. With every step. Every movement.
It was terribly embarrassing.
And at the same time, insanely intense.
I was walking naked across a regular beach, feeling the wind, the sand, my own breathing, and understanding: they see me. All of me. No swimsuit, no protection, no chance to pretend nothing is happening. And the stronger the embarrassment became, the more sharply I felt my body — alive, open, feminine, too real.
We almost ran the last few meters and literally flew into the water.
I went in up to my chest and exhaled as if I had escaped a fire. My friend started laughing beside me. First quietly, then louder and louder. I could not hold back either. We stood in the water, naked, red from shame and cold, laughing so hard my shoulders shook.
“Congratulations,” she said. “Your first nudist experience. Straight in front of a regular audience.”
“At least it’ll be memorable,” I answered. “If I survive.”
And then a guy appeared nearby.
He swam closer, smiling, but without arrogance. He was very handsome: dark wet hair, tanned skin, calm eyes. The kind of man who makes you want to seem more confident, even when you are standing chest-deep in water and know you are wearing absolutely nothing.
“I think you ended up in the wrong place,” he said in Russian with a slight accent.
My friend and I looked at each other and burst out laughing again.
“Is it that obvious?” I asked.
“Only a little,” he said. “Especially when the whole beach suddenly decided to go swimming.”
I blushed so hard I felt heat in my cheeks again. But in the water, it was easier. The water covered us, embraced the body, gave us the chance to speak almost calmly. We introduced ourselves. His name was Marek. He was from Lithuania, was vacationing nearby, and actually knew where the real nude beach was.
We stood in the water and talked. First we laughed about our mistake, then we talked about Palanga, the dunes, the sea. I tried to act casual, but I kept feeling the strange sharpness of the situation. He could see my shoulders, wet hair, collarbones, and he knew I was naked under the water. I could see how hard he was trying to be polite, to look me in the eyes, not to make us uncomfortable. And that made the moment even more tense.
Not vulgar. Not dirty.
But hot.
Because everything balanced on the edge: we were just talking, laughing, standing in the sea, but there was an obvious secret between us — when I came out of the water, he would see me completely.
At first, that seemed like a distant problem. Then we started freezing.
The water was cold. Goosebumps covered my shoulders, my lips began to tremble, my fingers went numb. My friend whispered first:
“I can’t anymore. We have to get out.”
I looked at the shore. Our things were far away. We would have to walk back anyway. But now Marek was there. Handsome, calm, smiling. And he understood perfectly well why we were hesitating.
“I can turn around,” he said softly.
It was very sweet.
And for some reason, that made it even more exciting.
“No need,” my friend suddenly said. “We’ve performed enough today.”
I laughed, but my heart started beating faster. Then I took a step toward the shore.
The water began to slide slowly down my body. First my shoulders appeared, then my chest, stomach, thighs. The cold air touched my wet skin at once. I felt the drops running down my body, my hair sticking to my neck, my skin becoming even more sensitive after the water.
That was probably the most embarrassing and most powerful moment of the day.
I was coming out of the sea naked in front of a handsome man I had just met. Not demonstratively, not on purpose, but no longer hiding either. I tried to walk calmly, though everything inside me was shaking. My chest felt cold from the wind and hot from embarrassment. Every step felt too slow.
Marek really did not stare. He behaved very tactfully. But I felt his gaze — brief, careful, almost involuntary. And instead of wanting to disappear, I suddenly felt a strange confidence.
Yes, I was naked.
Yes, he could see me.
And yes, I could still be beautiful, even while blushing, shivering from the cold, and trying not to step on a shell.
My friend came out after me and whispered:
“If we don’t find our towels now, I’m going to become an icy Venus statue.”
We both burst out laughing, and the tension softened a little.
Marek watched us until we reached the dunes, then called out:
“The real nude beach is farther behind the pines, second turn to the right!”
“Thank you!” I shouted, already almost running toward our things.
When we finally hid behind the dunes, we collapsed onto our towels and laughed so hard I could barely breathe.
“We wanted to find nudists,” I said.
“And became entertainment for the whole beach,” my friend answered.
“And met the most handsome person on the coast.”
“Yes, but we had to come out of the sea naked for that.”
“At least it was effective.”
Later, we finally found the real nude beach. And there everything was completely different: calm, soft, natural. People lay on the sand, read, swam, talked. Nobody made nudity into an event. Nobody looked the way people had looked on the regular beach.
We undressed again, but after our accidental naked parade, it was almost easy.
I lay down on the sand and closed my eyes. The sun touched my body, the wind dried my skin, and for the first time that day, I felt not panic, but real pleasure. The swimsuit no longer seemed like protection, but like an unnecessary detail.
I did not become a fanatical nudist after that. But if I now have a choice — to sunbathe in a swimsuit or without one — I will almost certainly choose without.
Because that day I understood: nudity can be funny, awkward, scary, sexual, freeing — and sometimes all of that happens at once.
Yes, we chose the wrong beach.
But maybe that mistake became the brightest part of the whole vacation.
At our hotel, we met two women from Riga. Over breakfast, they told us they had found a nude beach on the coast and now went only there.
“There’s a completely different feeling there,” one of them said. “Without a swimsuit, your body finally feels like it can breathe.”
I pretended to listen calmly, but something inside me immediately warmed up. The thought itself — lying naked on the sand, not hiding, feeling the sun with my whole body — was frightening and tempting at the same time.
My friend got excited instantly.
“We’re going,” she said.
“We are?”
“Of course. You can’t be afraid of your own skin forever.”
The next day, we got detailed directions from the women and went looking for that beach. The path turned out to be long and confusing: dunes, hollows, paths, pines, identical turns. I kept asking whether she was sure, and she kept answering:
“Relax. If we see naked people, we’re there.”
And then we really did see a girl coming out of the water. From a distance, she seemed completely nude.
“That’s it,” my friend said confidently. “We found it.”
We settled into a sandy hollow almost hidden between the dunes. The wind was cool, the sun kept appearing and disappearing, but there was no stopping us now. I took off my dress, then the top of my swimsuit, then the bottom — and suddenly I was completely naked among the sand and the sea.
The first sensation was like an electric shock.
My skin instantly became too sensitive. The wind touched my chest, stomach, thighs, back. The sand was warm under my feet. I tried to look calm, but inside everything was trembling: shame, excitement, fear, and that sweet thrill of doing something forbidden and not quite believing I had dared.
My friend undressed too and sat beside me.
“So now we are officially free women,” she said.
We sunbathed a little, laughed, played cards. But after a while, curiosity took over: where were all the nudists? We heard voices near the water, and my friend suggested:
“Let’s go swim. We’ll have a look.”
“Naked?”
“Why did we get undressed then?”
The water was far away. Our things stayed behind the dunes, but we decided that since this was a nude beach, everything was fine.
We came out of the hollow and walked toward the sea.
And almost immediately, we understood: something was wrong.
In the nearest hollow, a couple was lying down. The guy was wearing trunks. The girl was topless, but still wearing the bottom of her swimsuit. They looked at us as if we had stepped out of a dream. Farther on, there was another group. Dressed. Then a family under an umbrella. Then men with towels. And everyone was looking.
That was when I realized it.
We had the wrong beach.
We were two completely naked girls confidently walking across a regular beach toward the sea.
Heat rushed through me from head to toe. I wanted to disappear into the sand, turn around, run away, grab my towel — but our things were too far behind us. Going back across the whole beach was even scarier than reaching the water.
“Don’t stop,” my friend whispered.
“I’m going to die.”
“Then die beautifully.”
And we sped up.
The beach suddenly became very active. Several men apparently decided that exactly this moment was perfect for a swim. Someone got up from his towel. Someone pretended to look at the sea, though he was clearly not looking at the sea. I felt those glances on my skin. With every step. Every movement.
It was terribly embarrassing.
And at the same time, insanely intense.
I was walking naked across a regular beach, feeling the wind, the sand, my own breathing, and understanding: they see me. All of me. No swimsuit, no protection, no chance to pretend nothing is happening. And the stronger the embarrassment became, the more sharply I felt my body — alive, open, feminine, too real.
We almost ran the last few meters and literally flew into the water.
I went in up to my chest and exhaled as if I had escaped a fire. My friend started laughing beside me. First quietly, then louder and louder. I could not hold back either. We stood in the water, naked, red from shame and cold, laughing so hard my shoulders shook.
“Congratulations,” she said. “Your first nudist experience. Straight in front of a regular audience.”
“At least it’ll be memorable,” I answered. “If I survive.”
And then a guy appeared nearby.
He swam closer, smiling, but without arrogance. He was very handsome: dark wet hair, tanned skin, calm eyes. The kind of man who makes you want to seem more confident, even when you are standing chest-deep in water and know you are wearing absolutely nothing.
“I think you ended up in the wrong place,” he said in Russian with a slight accent.
My friend and I looked at each other and burst out laughing again.
“Is it that obvious?” I asked.
“Only a little,” he said. “Especially when the whole beach suddenly decided to go swimming.”
I blushed so hard I felt heat in my cheeks again. But in the water, it was easier. The water covered us, embraced the body, gave us the chance to speak almost calmly. We introduced ourselves. His name was Marek. He was from Lithuania, was vacationing nearby, and actually knew where the real nude beach was.
We stood in the water and talked. First we laughed about our mistake, then we talked about Palanga, the dunes, the sea. I tried to act casual, but I kept feeling the strange sharpness of the situation. He could see my shoulders, wet hair, collarbones, and he knew I was naked under the water. I could see how hard he was trying to be polite, to look me in the eyes, not to make us uncomfortable. And that made the moment even more tense.
Not vulgar. Not dirty.
But hot.
Because everything balanced on the edge: we were just talking, laughing, standing in the sea, but there was an obvious secret between us — when I came out of the water, he would see me completely.
At first, that seemed like a distant problem. Then we started freezing.
The water was cold. Goosebumps covered my shoulders, my lips began to tremble, my fingers went numb. My friend whispered first:
“I can’t anymore. We have to get out.”
I looked at the shore. Our things were far away. We would have to walk back anyway. But now Marek was there. Handsome, calm, smiling. And he understood perfectly well why we were hesitating.
“I can turn around,” he said softly.
It was very sweet.
And for some reason, that made it even more exciting.
“No need,” my friend suddenly said. “We’ve performed enough today.”
I laughed, but my heart started beating faster. Then I took a step toward the shore.
The water began to slide slowly down my body. First my shoulders appeared, then my chest, stomach, thighs. The cold air touched my wet skin at once. I felt the drops running down my body, my hair sticking to my neck, my skin becoming even more sensitive after the water.
That was probably the most embarrassing and most powerful moment of the day.
I was coming out of the sea naked in front of a handsome man I had just met. Not demonstratively, not on purpose, but no longer hiding either. I tried to walk calmly, though everything inside me was shaking. My chest felt cold from the wind and hot from embarrassment. Every step felt too slow.
Marek really did not stare. He behaved very tactfully. But I felt his gaze — brief, careful, almost involuntary. And instead of wanting to disappear, I suddenly felt a strange confidence.
Yes, I was naked.
Yes, he could see me.
And yes, I could still be beautiful, even while blushing, shivering from the cold, and trying not to step on a shell.
My friend came out after me and whispered:
“If we don’t find our towels now, I’m going to become an icy Venus statue.”
We both burst out laughing, and the tension softened a little.
Marek watched us until we reached the dunes, then called out:
“The real nude beach is farther behind the pines, second turn to the right!”
“Thank you!” I shouted, already almost running toward our things.
When we finally hid behind the dunes, we collapsed onto our towels and laughed so hard I could barely breathe.
“We wanted to find nudists,” I said.
“And became entertainment for the whole beach,” my friend answered.
“And met the most handsome person on the coast.”
“Yes, but we had to come out of the sea naked for that.”
“At least it was effective.”
Later, we finally found the real nude beach. And there everything was completely different: calm, soft, natural. People lay on the sand, read, swam, talked. Nobody made nudity into an event. Nobody looked the way people had looked on the regular beach.
We undressed again, but after our accidental naked parade, it was almost easy.
I lay down on the sand and closed my eyes. The sun touched my body, the wind dried my skin, and for the first time that day, I felt not panic, but real pleasure. The swimsuit no longer seemed like protection, but like an unnecessary detail.
I did not become a fanatical nudist after that. But if I now have a choice — to sunbathe in a swimsuit or without one — I will almost certainly choose without.
Because that day I understood: nudity can be funny, awkward, scary, sexual, freeing — and sometimes all of that happens at once.
Yes, we chose the wrong beach.
But maybe that mistake became the brightest part of the whole vacation.
🔒
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