For a people easily split into Northerners and Southerners,
Nigerians can still be held together by their sense of morality and religiosity.
The genuineness of this though is a subject for another day, but in my casual
observation there is a taboo that seems to be attached to the hospitality
industry with men who check into hotel rooms, considered straying husbands, and
women seen with hotel room keys as unfaithful wives. What is worse is if you
are a young girl. I do not have to say what already pops up in your head. And
for young Nigerian boys, the tag of being a cyber-criminal doesn’t come off
easily. Why do these tags get attached
to these demography of people? Why is it hard to imagine that a man might have
an argument with his wife and it gets to the point where he needs time to be
alone to cool off and so he checks into a hotel? Or he may be on business from
another state, and since is flight is not until the next morning it only makes
sense to check into a hotel for the night. Or that a young female who also
happens to be a software developer needs an accommodation in Ikeja for the
weekend where she can work uninterrupted and where there is 24 hours
electricity and internet service that is very good. There are many valid reasons
why people could book a hotel, and it rarely has to be sinister or filled with
ulterior motives.
Hotel owners and managers have in the past attributed the
low patronage of their business to this mentality among Nigerians.
Image source: www.commons.wikimedia.org
“White people don’t think like that” says an hotel manager
who chose to remain unnamed “They come in here for business or sightseeing,
they check into an hotel, its normal for them as it is for them over there,
nobody is raising eyebrows or calling your Pastor to report you. But here in
Nigeria, we have the mentality that if a man is checking into a hotel he is
lodging with his girlfriend, he is unfaithful to his wife. If a woman does it
then she is a shame to her husband”
It would also be necessary for people to be aware that like going
into a restaurant to eat, or like taking the kids to an amusement park or taking
a significant other to a fancy date, checking in to a hotel room for the
weekend is also a good way to treat yourself. And we should try it sometime.
Clean sheets. Hot running water, satellite television, room service, internet
access all these at affordable rates. Take a central place in Lagos like Ikeja
for example where the competition is high, there are lots of cheap hotels
in Ikeja that provide these to their guests.
Image Courtesy Logbaby.com
“Nigerians work so hard for their money, I don’t see why
anyone would want to judge someone who goes for a weekend getaway in a moderate
hotel or a resort, just to relax yourself. You don’t even have to go with
anyone. I do it sometimes and switch off my phones, because I don’t want
disturbance. And with time, I find that it is good for my health.” Says Sunday
Oriaku who is a businessman who imports building materials from China.
Moreover hotels provide more than just accommodation. They often
cater to business travelers and businessmen by having conference rooms and
business meeting rooms in their buildings. So where their conference room is
booked for a week long seminar that brings people from all over the country it
only seems the wise thing to book rooms in the same hotel or a nearby hotel for
the sake of convenience.
It may take a while. But we may eventually get there. The
secret may be for people not to straddle others with their own notion or idea
of morality. While it may be true that some married persons do use hotel getaways
for trysts and shenanigans, humans are naturally wired to pursue happiness and
fulfillment and if they happen not to find it in their home or marriage it is
almost natural to seek this happiness elsewhere. The point really is, the hotel
industry and business must be seen as providing an important service within the
economy, jobs, entertainment, accommodation for stranded persons who are
traveling or out of their home base for one business or the other, to then turn
our noses at people who patronize hotels when they need to is a faux morality
that needs to stop.
So, I’m sitting here writing this and hoping that if I ask
this Yoruba mummy beside me where I can find affordable
hotels in Lekki she isn’t going to eyeball me and question my home
training.
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