Win situation for a host: - somewhat formal gathering - everyone keep their shoes on (no one is singled out) - informal/small circle/close friends - shoes off preferred, but not required (person with mobility issues shouldn't feel singled out among friends, right?) IMHO, that's what I do in my house, and expect when visiting others |
Are you being deliberately dense? It's not a "win situation" for a host to have people walking through their home with outside shoes when the host is uncomfortable with people wearing shoes in their home.
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I am uncomfortable with people wearing shoes in my house on regular basis. But when I'm hosting - clean up is expected. That's the price for having people over. Don't want clean-up - don't host, as easy as that. |
Actually it seems like the best solution is to only invite people over who you already know don’t have any physical or psychological issues that would prevent them from removing their shoes in my home. I’m not getting professional steam carpet cleaning just so I can invite one particular person over. I’ve never wanted to be a cliquey person but I guess this risk of other people being ‘too different to fit in with the expected norms’ is how it begins. |
What happens when that person who has difficulty taking off shoes and walking barefoot turns out to be your grandma or father or beloved aunt? Will you exclude them, too? |
Your home. You have ever right to ask people to remove their shoes. I'm from Sweden and we also NEVER wear our shoes in the house. It's considered very filthy. We also keep cleaner homes than Americans. However, I do not have a sign. Most people see the shoes and remove theirs. For the clueless, I just tolerate their ignorant rudeness and don't say anything and clean after they leave. |
| Most no-shoe households I know do what PP said: formal, bigger parties - shoes okay; just a family popping over - shoes off. I have no issues with that. |
| We do not have people or livestock defecating in the streets in the US and asking people to remove their shoes is beyond rude. |
I take it you don’t live in DC. |
LOL Y'all are funny. The first thing I do is I wash my hands. Then hug and kiss everyone. Then yes, change clothes. I don't recycle a lot of outfits (going mostly casual, sometimes business casual), so they go into the hamper. No, I don't need to do the laundry immediately. I have enough clothes, and the actual act of washing my clothes can wait
I do have house clothes and slippers. It bugs me when kids don't change from their school clothes. FWIW, I'm foreign (not Asian). |