Anonymous wrote:Shoes track lead, so pediatricians recommend removing shoes if there’s a crawler in the house.
Our family is Swedish and Korean, and we’ve always been shoes off regardless.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who fell on a waxed floor in a "no shoe" house. She broke her rotator cuff and sued the owners of the 'no shoe" house and won.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in SoCal & in my personal experience, the majority of people I visit inside their homes request a “no-shoes” household.
I think that if someone requests this - it would only be proper to provide guests w/disposable paper booties so they do not have to have their feet 🦶🏽 actually come into close contact w/floors as that can feel gross on their end.
That's weird as sh!t.
Anonymous wrote:I live in SoCal & in my personal experience, the majority of people I visit inside their homes request a “no-shoes” household.
I think that if someone requests this - it would only be proper to provide guests w/disposable paper booties so they do not have to have their feet 🦶🏽 actually come into close contact w/floors as that can feel gross on their end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a class thing. Would never cross my mind to ask someone to take their shoes off
But the anti-shoe contingent thinks it's the slobs and the rubes who wear shoes indoors
Anonymous wrote:I am Asian American and grew up without shoes inside the house and assumed this was the norm. My husband is American and is used to a no shoes household, but he’s not as fastidious as I am about it - if he needs to pop back into the house to get something he will leave shoes on. I don’t make a big deal about it.
His parents however, wear shoes inside all the time, unless it’s something like rain boots or snow boots. Otherwise they’ll put on sneakers or dress shoes, go about their business outside, and keep them on when they return. This includes wearing outside shoes in their bedroom and bathroom, not taking them off until bedtime.
I find this very puzzling as they are very neat and hygiene minded people. They live in a beautiful, expensive house, they pay for weekly cleaning and specifically ask the cleaners to mop all the floors, and they are generally pretty paranoid about things like germs. So how come they don’t mind all the gunk that’s on the bottom of their shoes? They live in a very urban part of DC so it’s not like they only go out to drive , and use public transportation, too.
Is this common among Americans ? If it’s relevant they are in their early 60s. Every time they visit and wear shoes inside our house I am so uncomfortable but I don’t want to be rude and repeatedly ask/remind them.
Anonymous wrote:I am Asian American and grew up without shoes inside the house and assumed this was the norm. My husband is American and is used to a no shoes household, but he’s not as fastidious as I am about it - if he needs to pop back into the house to get something he will leave shoes on. I don’t make a big deal about it.
His parents however, wear shoes inside all the time, unless it’s something like rain boots or snow boots. Otherwise they’ll put on sneakers or dress shoes, go about their business outside, and keep them on when they return. This includes wearing outside shoes in their bedroom and bathroom, not taking them off until bedtime.
I find this very puzzling as they are very neat and hygiene minded people. They live in a beautiful, expensive house, they pay for weekly cleaning and specifically ask the cleaners to mop all the floors, and they are generally pretty paranoid about things like germs. So how come they don’t mind all the gunk that’s on the bottom of their shoes? They live in a very urban part of DC so it’s not like they only go out to drive , and use public transportation, too.
Is this common among Americans ? If it’s relevant they are in their early 60s. Every time they visit and wear shoes inside our house I am so uncomfortable but I don’t want to be rude and repeatedly ask/remind them.