'All my life I've walked into hotel rooms and headed straight to the tea tray to make myself cup after relaxing cup of tea in that kettle, never once considering that somebody may have boiled their undies in it,' says Mitali Saran.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh
This week I bring you an important public service announcement: You know the handy electric kettle in your hotel room, the one placed on the tea and coffee tray?
Well, according to a report in The Independent, some guests may have boiled their underwear in that kettle, leaving a residue of nasty, potentially deadly, bacteria in there. It's an upsetting read.
All my life I've walked into hotel rooms and headed straight to the tea tray to make myself cup after relaxing cup of tea in that kettle, never once considering that somebody may have boiled their undies in it.
Well, the only stupid person is the person who refuses to learn, and that ends today: I'm never packing extra underwear again, this kettle thing is genius.
As for the toxins, if so many of us wear underwear so filthy that it has to be boiled, we're probably already resistant to a large variety of harmful substances.
A kettle is efficient, and anyway, what are the options?
Don't say the hotel laundry service -- who trusts hotel laundries? They probably just have a giant kettle down there.
You could hand wash things in the bathroom sink, but that would mean putting your phone down, and that's just crazy talk.
No, the kettle is still winning.
It's also environment friendly. Remember that the wars of the future will be fought not over whether or not the finale of Season 7 of Game of Thrones was disappointing, but over water scarcity.
That may sound unlikely when Houston and Mumbai are drowning, but flood and drought are flip sides of the same climate change coin, and climate change is upon us, good people.
We must all do our bit to save the planet.
My father once told me that when he was a young man, living in a rented box room and always in a hurry to get to work, he often saved time and resources by shaving with the same water in which he boiled his eggs.
I think there's an important lesson there that can be applied to underwear and teabags.
The teabags would give the underwear a nice sepia colour, or just even out the sepia colour you've already given it, and panty backwash might add that missing je ne sais quoi to your tea.
Just kidding! It's gross and dangerous, people, don't boil your freaking knickers in the freaking communal tea kettle that other people are going to use for tea!
I can't freaking believe that we've got space probes analysing Jupiter, and chips the size of pinheads running the world, and we still have to write sentences like that.
On the other hand, as Jean-Paul Sartre and Marvin the Paranoid Android knew, humans are inexhaustibly horrible and disgusting, and they seem to become more horrible and disgusting when they are at hotels and restaurants.
Waiters spit in the soup, housekeeping staff wipe drinking glasses with the same cloth as the sink and sofa; guests defecate in wardrobe drawers, urinate in minibar bottles they leave in the minibar, leave unspeakable fluids on their mattresses, and poop in their towels; annoyed housekeeping might clean your bathroom floor with your bath towel; one person clogged up the toilet by sticking an entire rotisserie chicken into it, and one guy killed a monkey in his room.
And those are just the stories that do get told.
What I'm saying is, the kettle is not necessarily the filthiest thing your hotel room has ever seen, but it could be the most dangerous.
The obvious fix is to avoid tea and coffee altogether, and just pack your own hip flask. You can wrap it in lots of extra underwear.