Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the people who ask me to remove my shoes are Asian, I don't mind because I assume that it is cultural. If the people are not Asian and ask me to remove my shoes, I assume they are neurotic.
Really?
There are many cultures that take off shoes before entering a home, including some Middle Eastern, African, and European cultures. And I'm a white chic from New England and our family ALWAYS took our shoes off at the door.
I would guess that ALL Middle East countries (except Israel) take off shoes before entering a home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the people who ask me to remove my shoes are Asian, I don't mind because I assume that it is cultural. If the people are not Asian and ask me to remove my shoes, I assume they are neurotic.
Really?
There are many cultures that take off shoes before entering a home, including some Middle Eastern, African, and European cultures. And I'm a white chic from New England and our family ALWAYS took our shoes off at the door.
Anonymous wrote:If the people who ask me to remove my shoes are Asian, I don't mind because I assume that it is cultural. If the people are not Asian and ask me to remove my shoes, I assume they are neurotic.
Anonymous wrote:If the people who ask me to remove my shoes are Asian, I don't mind because I assume that it is cultural. If the people are not Asian and ask me to remove my shoes, I assume they are neurotic.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I'm offended if I am wearing sandals or shoes with no socks and then I have to walk around someone's house barefoot. Esp. if my pedicure is getting old. Very embarrassing.
I think your "drill" should be more about your guests than about you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What else disgusts you? People use public toilets every day do you also want them to wash their bottoms prior to using your toilet. The most germ-ridden article for women is the bottom of their handbag--do you give them lysol or clorox wipes so they can wipe off their germ-ridden purses. When in Rome and in the US it is not the custom to remove one's shoes.
In some parts of the US is it customary. And it IS cleaner:
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Consumer/story?id=5177409&page=1
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, this thread again! It bugged me so much the last time around I just have to comment again.
Can't we agree that if you want people to take their shoes off at your home, that's fine, but you need to bear the burden of telling them about it in advance? it may be cumbersome or an extra step, but if I am invited to a no shoes house, I wouldn't wear:
pants with a length suitable for being barefoot (don't want to drag my clean pants on the floor or trip on a hem that is intended for taller heels)
slippers or socks with grips -- frankly, your desire for shoe-free floors does not trump my desire to avoid athlete's foot or an injury from slipping and falling
Others who are less worried about athlete's foot may simply want to update their pedicure, or be sure something is hiding their corns, take care that their blisters are bandaged effectively (so they don't get infected from traipsing around on the ground) and so on.
If you don't inform your guests of your shoes policy before they arrive, it's supremely uncool. If you tell people beforehand that it's going to be a sock-hop, no problem.