| You all don’t have dogs? My dog walks through his own pee in the yard and that of other dogs in walks. I don’t make him wear shoes because I don’t have ocd. People this insane about germs that would flip out over a few footsteps through the house need a psychiatrist. The gossiping is just the icing on the cake. I bet her kid has allergies and autoimmune disease in the future. |
| Doesn’t anyone get invited to dinner parties? I have never once been asked to remove my shoes at a party at someone’s home. That would be weird and insane. Just mop the floor afterward. |
I would confront her about this and say that if she had a problem then she should have told me and not gossip with a mutual friend. |
Same-I don’t care about guest shoes unless they go upstairs on the light colored carpets in which case i will either ask them to take off or silently cringe depending on the scenario. |
You guys are all overreacting. If I had to bet, it was something like: Friend 2: I’m so tired of Larla tracking in mud in her cleats. Shoe friend: Omgosh, I’m so strict about shoes. The other day Marla and Larlo put their shoes on by the back door and then walked to the front door and I had to take a Valium. Later Friend 2: what’s up Marla Marla: we had a play date at shoe friend’s Friend 2: oh yeah I heard because she mentioned you had your shoes on and she freaked out. None of this is a big deal!!! |
I have dogs too and my house is set up for them. A typical Japanese house is not set up for shoes. People sit on the floor. |
This is the American way. |
Ugh, your house sounds stuffy and stale as hell. Fresh air is so important in a house. |
Who’s talking about a typical Japanese house? I’ve never been to a house in the US composed of tatami mats. |
Dp. I have tatami in my house in the US. But, I don't think a house needs to be setup with tatami for people to feel uncomfortable with shoes in the home. It's probably cultural and just a gut reflex. The germs are real. Your shoes literally track in fecal matter. I doubt, however, the friend's reaction is consciously about the germs. The idea that shoes are dirty and shouldn't be in the house is a cultural norm, and the reaction against is automatic. |
How many Americans of Asian ancestry have a house typical of Asian countries? None! I just leave when asked to remove my shoes because it is rude. Anyone with children already have dirty houses because children are dirt magnets. |
| If you ask me to remove my shoes I will.adk you for throwaway slippers within non-slip strips so I don't slip and fall on your waxed slippery floors. If you can't oblige me then I will take my leave. |
Pp here. Who said we don’t open our windows? I have 3 kids and we host people often. We have 6 different exits and kids often come in through the front door or mudroom and leave through garage or backyard. Of course kids trek through our kitchen and foyer with shoes. I don’t like it but they do it. I would say most of our guests or our frequent guests come through and leave through our mudroom. We have house cleaners who clean our floors often. |
This. We’re also a no-shoe household and I wouldn’t bat an eye at what you did, OP. I sure as hell wouldn’t gossip about it to a mutual friend. |
| It sounds like the no shoes policy didn't cross OP's mind at that moment and she now regrets it. No one is perfect. The hostess could have reminded her but didn't and probably regrets that herself. She certainly shouldn't have bad-mouthed her over it. |