Lagos Massage Parlours Where Sex Is ‘After-Service’ Bonus
Some
people say that passion often flows when a man and a woman are left in a room
long enough. This seems to be true of some service jobs that pitch both sexes
together as service providers and clients.
Dalliance
between male hairstylists and female clients
Kunle
Olutayo, a male hair stylist, gets an average of ten female customers a day.
Although
not bad in terms of good looks, Olutayo grew up as a shy little boy,
particularly around girls until his painful fortune changed about seven years
ago when he became a hairstylist. Shortly after starting the job following a
six months’ training, Olutayo could not believe his luck.
With
an endless string of female customers, he no longer had to worry about his
failing nerves since some of his female customers were woman enough to take the
initiative.
Olutayo
was busy fixing the hair of one of his numerous female customers when our
correspondent visited the salon he shares with four other stylists around the
famous Ikeja Under-bridge in Lagos.
As he
attached a weave-on to the customer’s hair, the two joked about the lady’s
receding hairline. Some of the customer’s hair was falling off at the front and
Olutayo teased her about it being one of the signs of old age.
Olutayo
is close to many of his customers and has dated a few, even though he
repeatedly described it as bad for business. When he was still new on the job,
he was overwhelmed by the surplus number of women he encountered daily and so
indulged himself when he could.
However,
Olutayo has since learnt a few lessons.
“This
job is not for womanisers. If you’re a womaniser, stay away from this job
because you will continue to lose money. When I first started the job, it
exposed me to so many women for the first time. I used to be very shy but on
this job, I met women who seduced me. Some of the women would seduce their
stylists to avoid paying for the service, which also means not paying on
subsequent visits.
“So a
womaniser has a lot to lose as a hairstylist. Now, I’ve learnt my lesson, I no
longer sleep with my clients anyhow. I only date one lady customer now and that
limits my loss. Before now, I used to forgo a lot of money to female customers
that I had affairs with,” he said.
Explaining
how his seducers perform their act, Olutayo demonstrated with his eyes,
feigning sexual interest and willingness and hands, rubbing on our
correspondent, who had briefly assumed the role of a stylist.
“The
women won’t open their mouths to say they want any hairstylist, but once they
are seated and you’re about to start fixing their hair, they can say they don’t
have money and need to fix their hair for an important occasion, or say they
can only afford an amount not up to half the price of the materials to be used
and the service.
“While
they are appealing, they are caressing you with their hands and looking at you
with funny eyes (seductively). Some may call ahead to say they don’t have
money. In such cases, negotiations can be done over the phone.
“If
I’m interested, I only have to tell the customer that I’ve always liked her and
ask for her affection in return. Almost 100 per cent of the time, they are open
to an arrangement or rendezvous that could later lead to a hotel room,” he said
sheepishly.
Special
hotel booking called ‘short time,’ which is for an hour or two, is usually used
for such rendezvous.
Saturday
PUNCH findings
reveal that many of the male hairstylists who actively womanise often fall
under two categories- those who are new on the job and those who could not
complete their apprenticeship for some reason.
A
source explained that the newcomers are too inexperienced to deal with the
temptations associated with their new job, while those in the other category
are too grateful for their fortune in spite of their inability to complete
their training that they over-indulge themselves in their good fortune.
“I
look at some of them (hairstylist womanisers) and I shake my head. They lose in
so many ways because if the customer cannot pay for the weave-on, the stylists
may have to use their own weave-on as well, fix the hair free of charge, pay
N1,500 or N2,000 for the ‘short time’ they will spend at the hotel with the
customer, possibly buy drinks there and even miss one or two other customers
that will call at their shops while they are away,” said Segun, a male
hairstylist with eight years’ experience.
Although,
the category of women who visit male hairstylists range from students to
workers in practically all fields, from Olutayo’s experience, the women who are
open to such dalliances are usually those referred to as club girls.
A
cross section of male hairstylists said the next category of women usually open
to having romance with them are single mothers. But with the single mothers,
male hairstylists need not worry about not getting paid.
For instance,
a male hairstylist, who identified himself as Johnson, narrated his experience
with a female customer he once had a sexual affair with.
According
to Johnson’s account, his romance with the woman started after his third visit
to her Lekki residence for home service. Johnson does home service for
customers who are willing to pay extra which has been factored in due to the
distance, transportation cost and so on.
“The
woman never negotiated any amount I charged and she always paid me.
“It
started innocently when she asked me to come and fix her hair at home, before
it later graduated to sex. She was a single mother with one daughter, so she
usually asked me to come in the morning when her daughter would be in school,”
Johnson said.
Johnson
added that he had noticed that a lot of his older female customers like to date
young boys judging by their discussions at the salon, jokingly, describing
salons as homes of gossips and rumours.
Most
women confirmed that they prefer male hairstylists to their female counterparts
in a poll conducted by our correspondent.
‘I’m
in love with male hairstylists’
One
of the respondents who identified herself as Nkem, admitted to having
fantasised about dating her “handsome male hairstylists” countless times but
couldn’t bring herself to initiate a move.
“I
actually go to the salon that I use because of the male hairstylists. They are
very handsome and sometimes I wish that one of them would ask me out but it has
not happened yet. I think male hairstylists are better than the female ones
because a man would know what fits you better than a woman,” she said.
Another
place that promises an abundance of passion is a massage parlour because it
usually pitches both sexes together alone.
Visiting
massage parlours for the wonders of the experienced hands of masseurs and
masseuses is not yet a popular pastime in the country, however, the trend is
growing by the day.
The
idea of having a massage is therapeutic. It also helps the client to relax and
be released of stress and body pains, but investigation shows that often times
in Nigeria, clients wish for more than stress and pain relief. Our findings
show that many male clients get sexually aroused and get an erection within a
few minutes of body massage.
Happy
hour
A
cross section of masseuses said many of the clients who visit their parlours
ask for ‘happy hours’ or ‘happy ending massages.’ These are erotic massages
that end with hand jobs, blow jobs or sex.
“When
some of the clients come in, they ask, ‘do you do happy hour or happy ending’
and we say no. The best thing is not to start what you won’t be able to finish;
so we tell them that we don’t do such things here, but I know that some massage
parlours do it abroad,” said Franca Oriakhi, the Managing Director of World Beauty
Salon and Spa, Surulere, Lagos.
Another
beauty therapist, Ruth Zobeashia of Rutiana Perfection Parlour, Ikeja in Lagos,
also shared similar experiences on the job.
Zobeashia,
who has had over 10 years’ experience as a masseuse, said, “Most of the Nigerian
men who come here, once they see that it’s a beautiful lady that will attend to
them, what goes to their head is sex after five minutes of massage.
“Some
of them will say, ‘Can you suck me? Can you make me come? I will pay you extra
for doing it.’ I tell them that we don’t offer anything beyond massage here.
When I explain to them that I can’t do it, then they stop visiting. What most
of them want is sex and not massage, really. It’s the whites (foreigners) who
really understand the essence of massage and some blacks too that come here,”
she said.
Zobeashia
recalled how she had to escape through a bathroom window about seven years ago
while giving a man a massage. The client had wanted sex also.
Recounting
the incident, she said, “We get all kinds of harassment and embarrassment on
the job. I was giving a man a massage one day when he insisted that he wanted
to have sex with me. I told him that I needed to use the bathroom. It was
through the window that I managed to get out.
“Some
of the men will say that they have girls who tended to their needs where they
used to have massage and so I tell them to go back there. One day, I asked a
client demanding for sex if he would be happy if his wife was sleeping with her
clients. I was shocked when he replied that he didn’t care, ‘after all, that’s
her job.’”
Interestingly,
some of the harassments are not limited to male clients, according to
Zobeashia, who has received sexual invitations from female clients too. Some
female clients who are lesbians also ask to be caressed and erotically fingered
in their private regions during massages.
“Lesbians
come here and want the same thing the men want. A man having trouble with his
marriage once told me that he was advised by a friend to visit a massage
parlour to get the sexual satisfaction his wife denied him at home,” she
continued with a surprise look on her face.
Investigation
indeed shows that some massage parlours offer sexual pleasures in Ikeja, Ikoyi
and Lekki areas of Lagos. Many of such parlours keep the information within a
circle, largely made up of foreigners.
A
Briton who had a chat with our correspondent online named a few spas and
massage parlours in Lagos that offer ‘happy hours’ or ‘happy ending’ massages.
He also said there were masseurs and masseuses who service clients at home,
with massage and sex.
“Some
of us in the Nigerian white community patronise these places. Some Nigerians
also know about them as well. There is a spa in Lagos with Asian women as
masseuses, where clients can pay for what they want. Massage parlours that have
happy endings are common in Asia, so maybe that’s why some Nigerians ask for
such services here after experiencing it elsewhere,” he commented.
But
that is not all; tattooists also deal with temptations from customers of the opposite
sex. In Lagos, tattooists are predominantly males and are often required to
tattoo on female erotic parts like the breasts, buttocks, thighs and the vagina
(the female reproductive part).
Tattooists
are seduced by clients too
A
tattooist, Abisola Ojikutu of Bizzysaki Tattoo Studio, Ikeja, told our
correspondent that he sometimes gets seduced by female clients, but quickly
added that in spite of it, he still strives to maintain professionalism on the
job.
“I
tattoo almost all parts of the body, including body parts of members of the
opposite sex because it’s my job. I tattoo their private parts and do breast
enlargement and other stuff. Yes, seduction happens because we are humans but I
act professionally. And I have to also consider my money, so I act like I’m not
moved. Even if a lady seduces me as a tattoo celebrity, we suspend all till
after work,” he said.
Via
- Punch
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