Same here. Cloth liners in a 3 bin sorter hamper and they get washed with dirty laundry. |
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In Japan there’s a whole category of clothing called “Room Wear,” although not everyone differentiates like this.
Also in my twenties I had a roommate who was a Southern sorority-girl type who went to fancy schools and she would always change out of her cute, fashionable outfits into shorts and a big tee the moment she got home. This seemed to be more about preserving the nice clothes and not about any concern with outside germs though |
| My family was like this growing up. We don't force our kids to do it now, but I wish we had. I change into athleisure/lounge clothes when I get home, but that is a comfort thing and not a cleanliness thing. |
Don't you have hampers? Hampers are for dirty clothes, baskets are for clean clothes. |
Not Indian, but same. Come home, change into indoor clothes. Usually t-shirt and comfy sweatpants or similar… that I use indoors. |
I don't think most people differentiate - they carry their clothes to and fro in the same baskets or hampers. That is why someone upstream commented that this was batshit crazy stuff. |
| Do people not know they have skin? |
I get that not everyone does this but it's not "batshit." Like there is clear logic to it -- clean clothes in the clean container and dirty clothes in the dirty container. I think people jump to "this is insane" because they feel implicated by it -- if other people are doing this, am I dirty for not doing it? And the answer is... maybe? Cleanliness is strange because it's a continuum. Some people *are* cleaner than other people. Some things that would make you or your house cleaner might not be worth the effort, others are really not that hard to implement. Obviously everyone chooses for themselves. But I guarantee you do at least some things for the sake of cleanliness that other people don't do. Does that make you batshit? No, of course not. I have an extremely keen sense of smell, so there are certain things I do that my husband does not find necessary because he appears to have a very crude sense of smell. For instance I take the trash out daily because it will begin to stink to me otherwise. I scoop the cat litter twice a day. I wash our throw pillows and blankets more frequently than he would (he would never wash them) and so on. I'm not batshit and he's not "dirty", it's just that we experience the world differently. |
| Always. |
| I do this as well, mainly because my parents did this. Saved the "nice" clothes for work and church etc... and changed into home clothes or outside work clothes when they were home. |