Do you provide inside shoes with support? I cannot walk with socks or bare feet. |
But if the people you are attempting to respect are asking you to take off your shoes, how is it respectful to them not to? "Sachiko, I have too much respect for you to take off my shoes, even though you want me to". That makes no sense at all. |
Why on earth would anyone want to come over? The nasty clearly runs deep in you. |
I would use the show covers, but I would not take off my shoes- too much pain. |
. Yes and a bit OCD |
| I'm European and everyone takes their shoes off in my house. |
Maybe because they'd like to socialize with the host? I don't eat pork or drink wine. If I go to someone's house and the menu includes pork and wine, I don't make a stink about it and declare I am leaving because those things make me uncomfortable. That would be rude. I just avoid them. It's not like an allergy which is actually health-threatening. In any event, I don't insist people remove their shoes. Certainly if someone really needs their shoes or think they do, I'm not going to insist they take them off. But we do have a non-shoe house and if people ask if I prefer they remove their shoes, I say yes, thanks. And nearly everyone does ask since it's obvious from the shoe cabinet that we are a no-shoe house. Never has this been a problem in real life. |
| I always shoes or sandals in my house and never ask people to take theirs off. |
I wonder if it's a regional thing. My dad's family is from the midwest (Michigan) and never take their shoes off. I was raised in Philadelphia and all my East Coast friends and cousins were raised to take their shoes off. My West Coast friends, the same. Plus, many of us studied abroad in Asia (Japan for me) which cemented the custom even further. The posters who are insisting that leaving shoes on is American culture -- where are you from and how old are you? |
| Ask, a sign is rude. |
| I'm still wondering what people do about dinner parties and more formal events. Can a 'shoes off' person reply? |
This. Saying that outside the house is dirty so why not let your kids roll around in filth inside the house too is just ridiculous. I could say that you poop, right? And so poop is already inside you and touching you, and so you won't mind if my toddler makes a bit of a mess in the bathroom and I don't clean it up or you won't mind if I change my baby's diaper anywhere I want in your house - including kitchen benches, right? since you're already exposed to some germs anyway so it doesn't matter? |
And some people avoid taking their shoes off. It's not having different preferences that's a problem. It's insisting that other people adhere to your preferences even if it makes them uncomfortable that is. |
Grew up in the Northeast; raised by a Southern dad (a very formal guy) and Midwestern mom. I'm 52. I also write thank-you notes, insist on (almost) nightly family dinners in the dining room, and don't think children should call adults by their first names until the adults ask. |
| I’m 48, grew up in VA (outside NoVA), come from an educated family and my parents were very formal/proper. I would never remove my shoes in someone’s home unless specifically asked to do so. I would comply, but think it’s weird. It seems a bit uncivilized. |