
Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com
Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com
The Anxiety of Working at a Historic Five-Star Hotel
āThis site is the flagship of Europeāthatās what makes it so special,ā the lovely HR lady tells me on my first day of being a hostess at a Michelin-starred restaurant in a historic five-star hotel. Iām wearing loafers that are too big for me while passing by men in uniforms, and women in heels that click on tiles.Ā
Iām drowning under the anxiety of a new job, but I donāt tell anyone. Instead, I focus on the end result: an extra Ā£15,000 a year, free meals on shift, uniforms washed for me. It means I can go on holiday and not worry about expenses, that I can move in with my partner to a nice area, that I can send money to my grandparents abroad who are in dire need of it.Ā
I put my uniform on, and itās of a length and a color that wouldnāt flatter anyone. I havenāt shaved my legs, so I want to keep my socks on, but Iām told thatās not how the rest wear it, so I wear these loafers without support.Ā
When Iām behind the desk, and Iām introduced to my supervisor, she says, āYour shoes arenāt appropriate. Donāt get me wrong! Theyāre nice. Theyāre just too chunky.ā
I donāt have the heart to tell her I spent Ā£70 on them. So I say to myself, Itās fine! They barely fit, anyway! Move on with your day. I buy a second pair at the end of my first week, ballerina flats with no support.Ā
I spend my first month shadowing a brunette, trying to pick up everything as fast as possible. I try to learn everyoneās names, even the colleagues that barely make eye contact with me. I keep my head up, and after my shift I soak my feet in boiling water to soothe the pain of standing for eight hours a day.
Itās a choice between being able to barely afford things and preserving my mental health.
Iām alone on my shift for days during my third week, one of the busiest of the year. I wake up at 4:30am to haggle with oil men for their phone numbers, their room numbers, and the reserved tables theyāre holding hostage. Because when youāre paying thousands a night, youāve earned the right to sit wherever you like, right?Ā
āWe donāt say ānoā to the guest,ā a manager tells me on the phone. āIf thereās no space, you make it. You offer something else. You never say no.ā
I am scheduled for eight days in a row. The restaurant gets a shiny new red plaque with a Michelin star to brag about.Ā
āArenāt you so proud to work here?ā guests ask me, and I lie through my teeth.Ā
āOh yes, itās been such a privilege.ā
My second month, Iām micromanaged from seven different mouths. Iām looked at like Iām a double-headed stag when I make decisions on my own. I canāt say no, but I have to steer, and manipulate, until I either get the desired result (e.g. someone sitting at a table instead of the counter, fitting a reservation into a fixed one-and-a-half hour slot), or someone makes sure I know I need to do better. Iām on for nine days in a row this time.Ā
I speak to HR about my struggles, and to the only manager who treats me like a human. He tells me to follow the chain of command, and to shut off the outside noise. Heās right. And I wish it was that simple, but on my seventh day of standing for hours, nothing is. I see a girl crying in the bathroom, and she tells me a story I know too well of a pesky colleague with a smart mouth.Ā
āMy dad just told me something,ā my boyfriend says. Iām staying with him on my two days off, and pain throbs in my feet. āHe says you donāt seem to be enjoying your job.ā
I donāt face it. This is supposed to be it. This is supposed to mean financial stability. Renting an apartment, going out for nice meals, saving up for emergencies. This meant showing I could do it.Ā
I say, āWell, I donāt love it ā but itās a job, right? No one loves work.ā
Eyes speak louder than mouths; directors and managers watch my every move. Waiters watch me struggle, and in passing, they squeeze my shoulder or offer me a smile for comfort. I tell my mom over voice note, āI wish a car would run me over right now so I didnāt have to go to work.ā She tells me to quit. That it isnāt worth it. My boyfriend encourages me to apply to other jobs. He also tells me it isnāt worth it.
When my pay comes, Iām so angry I cry. My salary package, composed of a base salary, service charge, and tips, is Ā£500 short of what I was expecting. I ask for an explanation, and HR sugarcoats the fact that we simply arenāt making enough money right now. āBut when the year ends, itāll all be there!ā A 12.5% tip added to every bill made up an essential portion of our pay, but our guest number had been low for weeks ā a fact the hiring manager had neglected to mention.Ā
Three months in, my grandfather dies. I apply to jobs to distract myself from the pain, but no one will hire someone who has been at their job for just a few months and wants to leave. I take a week off, and upon my return, my boss asks me why Iām not as perky as I usually am. I almost laugh in his face.Ā
Itās the end of the quarter. They no longer serve breakfast for the staff. Corporate is in and out most days, and the air is so thick with pressure no one can breathe. On the canteen, thereās a link to the staff survey, and managers have meetings with their teams to get ahead of the damage. Above the clock-in machine, thereās a poster for a mental health service sponsored by the company.Ā
We sit around a table listening to our boss talk about scones, and this man loves the sound of his own voice more than he loves the job. He says that we canāt hire more people because we donāt have the cash flow, and if anyone leaves, we wonāt replace them. We retort with reminding them of the pressure theyāre putting us under. Our director tells us everyone is under pressure, while my boss is looking at girls in bikinis on Instagram.Ā
Itās a funny choice to make, between being able to barely afford things and preserving oneās own mental health. I choose the risk of saying a name wrong, not recognizing someone, cracking a joke at the wrong place, wrong time; or following one managerās orders, and getting punished by another one. I feel I have to apologize for even breathing in the wrong direction.
I attempt to sign up for therapy, and the company service tells me my work-related stress is too severe for them to treat it. The skin under my feet shed, I dream of work five nights out of seven, and I beg to any merciful God out there that I fail my trial period at this job. At least then I wouldāve done everything I could.Ā
The flagship of Europe burns, and I burn out along with it.