I hope I don’t know you and you are never welcome in my house! You are super rude with your caps screaming. Yikes! |
Why is being without shoes uncomfortable for them? Do they have untreated fungus? Do they neglect their hygiene and stink to high heaven? Have you had your last pedi appointment a year ago? What is the issue here? I can't imagine wearing shoes (that are not slippers or flip flops) all day. I'm lucky in how much I can get away in a casual work environment, but even wearing super comfortable shoes all day I want them off in the evening. |
| ^^Forgot to mention. I can see how you may feel the need for shoes in a MacMansion with granite floors etc. But most of you live in extremely tight spaces. With wall-to-wall carpeting half the time. Wearing shoes in your home just sounds nasty. |
This. Where in Europe do they wear shoes inside? Somewhere warm? Never do we wear shoes at home in north, and definitely remove them before entering somebody's home. |
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The earlier PP claiming that Germans don’t take off their shoes inside a home and that it’s considered rude to do so must have been raised in a proverbial trailer park. I lived in Germany for years, am married to a German, have tons of German friends, and they absolutely take off their shoes. The boys and men also sit down to pee inside the house, because it’s cleaner to do it that way instead of spraying pee droplets all around the place that you may or may not see.
The only ones who don’t take off shoes are kids living in dorms or share housing at colleges (too many parties, people in and out all day, and let’s face it they’re drunk much of the time) and trashy people who have no class. |
Why can't you find something comfortable enough that you don't mind wearing it? Can't you afford well-constructed shoes? Do you have corns or bunions from cheap brands? Whatever. Next time I'm on a plane next to someone who's decided to go barefoot, would you please change seats with me? |
| I always want to be a polite guest so if there is a sign or I see shoes in the front, then I will remove my shoes. |
Even comfortable well-constructed expensive shoes have to walk into public bathrooms with urine/feces on them or walk on public roads/sidewalks where people have sneezed/spit phlegm/etc. You really want someone tracking all that through your house? I don't. Gross. DH and I both grew up wearing shoes in the house, but we are both now firmly committed to a no shoes house. Our parents are passive-aggressive about it but I do ask them to remove their shoes. I also ask all visiting children to remove their shoes. Most adults can take a hint, but if they ask me if they should remove their shoes, I reply "If you don't mind" |
It’s “cultural”? Since when? Not in American culture. |
| Eastern European here. Not rude at all per how I was raised, and my American-born husband agrees. We don't have a sign but are a shoe free home, and most people who visit already know this. My Western European MIL is of the same mindset, as is my South Asian best friend. |
Meant to add - we do keep slippers from the dollar store (that we do not reuse!) in case people object to going barefoot. We've never had anyone object so far. If we host a very large party, we generally let people leave their shoes on and then have cleaners come within the next couple of days. |
Ha-ha, so stinky feet it is, PP. You know there are remedies for that, right? |
Why, yes, absolutely. If someone comes over and wants to hold my baby, I absolutely ask them to wash their hands first. I don't really care if people think it's rude. Luckily, our friends are clean, well groomed people and aren't horrified by the idea of exposing their feet or washing their hands with the excuse of "germs are everywhere". |
| It is not rude at all. We live in a city and walk around a lot. I see people throwing lugies on the street, spitting, vomiting all the time. I do not want that in my house. We ask everyone to take off shoes. I guess if they don't like it they won't be back. Fine by me. |
There are plenty of Americans from different cultures |