Hotel
A hotel is a public space with semi-private, temporary accommodations where people come and go. We associate hotels with travel, and they can sometimes symbolize the transition from one situation to another—a place where we find ourselves temporarily; reflecting a more fleeting change than, say, moving from one house to another. In this sense, a hotel can represent a "transitional phase."
A hotel room suggests a temporary and impersonal dwelling, one where others have recently stayed and will occupy again as soon as we leave. During our stay, strangers (staff) might enter, underscoring its impermanent nature. In a way, one passes through a hotel room—it is not a place where one grows roots or creates a sense of "home." Symbolically, in dreams, it might represent a temporary situation or an inner space where one does not truly belong.
On a deeper level, the hotel can represent a provisional life or a temporary attitude of consciousness. During childhood and adolescence, we adapt to external expectations, shedding personality traits that are not accepted and adopting ones that better fit the environment. Over time, there is a risk that this provisional "self," initially formed to succeed in the external world, becomes permanent. We may begin to identify with this externalized self, unaware of how alien it is to our true nature.
In this sense, the hotel reflects this structure of consciousness: a place not meant to be lived in permanently, not one's true home, but a collective, transient space that was only ever intended as a temporary stop, yet one we repeatedly find ourselves inhabiting.