
A model shares her experiences in a shaky hotel.
Natalisi Taksisi, who lives in Thailand, explained in a Tiktok clip that she chose Japan for vacation because she thought it was a “very safe country.”
She said she stayed at an APA hotel and resort in Tokyo and initially looked like the ideal accommodation.
“This place looks legal and I have a key card that allows me to get into the hotel and my room,” Taksisi explains. “On the first day, everything was fine.”
She explained that something went wrong the next day, when the content creator returned to the hotel to fall asleep “after a day of sightseeing.”
“I came back around 7:30 pm and unlocked my room as usual, took off my clothes and lay on the bed,” Taksisi said.
Then she noticed the “strange smell”.
“At first, I thought it came from my hair or the sheets, but then I realized it came from under the bed.”
She said she leaned over and tried to find the source of the stench.
Taksisi “sees an eye” staring at her as she stares under the bed.

“I saw a man under the bed and I started screaming and jumping on my feet,” the shocked traveler said.
“The man crawled out from under the bed and stared at me for three seconds.”
“Those few seconds felt like my life was over,” she added.
Then, the invader “screamed” and ran out of her room.
Takisi was frightened and shouted at the hotel staff who reminded the police of her unintentional Bedfellow.
Authorities reportedly found an electric bank and a USB cable under the bed, but hotel staff reportedly had no explanation for his coming in.

“I kept asking the hotel, ‘How did it happen?’ They didn’t have any answers to me,” she lamented.
To make matters worse, hotel employees claimed that they were in the culprit due to the lack of CCTV cameras inside the building.
Police have not been able to identify the resort for help.
The influencer was so shocked by the invasion that she booked another hotel the same night.
She also asked the hotel to refund the $600 she paid for three nights, but they allegedly did not give her any compensation at the time.
They reportedly offered her a $178 coupon when she kept the hotel’s booking site with Agoda – an amount Taksisi thought was “absurd”.
Having enough, the model was called the hotel directly, demanding reimbursement, so they agreed to return her in full.
Taksisi said the following days of the trip were “nightmare”, recalling: “I couldn’t fall asleep, I was on the edge, checking every corner of the room.”
“I don’t know how anyone can get into my room, someone knows I’m alone in my room,” she said. “How can the hotel not be held responsible for such a serious safety responsibility?”
Taksisi hopes her traumatic torture will inspire hotels to “take practical action” and remind travelers of the dangers that can be suffered even in a safe country.