Anonymous wrote:If a person does have sweaty smelly feet, do you make them take their shoes off.
Some people are under arm sweaters, some are head sweaters and others sweat through their feet.
Ugh and it reeked. I had to rip carpets out after a house guest transferred their funk to my stair runners. As the funk lingered long after they left. Pee yew!
They were Brits by the way.
Maybe Asian people aren’t foot sweaters.
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:Mom grew up in the Great Depression of the 1930's. Each year she got one pair of shoes. They were expensive as a total part of the family income. She tells that she would get in big, big trouble if she lost a shoe as a child or got a shoe dirty.
Shoes for children were even more precious during WWII has leather was used to make boots for our soldiers. Shoes for children and adults were rationed in the US during this time.
Mom has always worn shoes in her homes. It is what you did if you were not one of the poors.
Anonymous wrote:Americans have a culture of wearing shoes because for hundreds of years not wearing shoes meant you could not afford shoes for your family and you were one of the poors.
Anonymous wrote:Because we are Americans and this is what we do in America.
Anonymous wrote:Americans have a culture of wearing shoes because for hundreds of years not wearing shoes meant you could not afford shoes for your family and you were one of the poors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have fallen arches or plantar fasciitis, then you need supportive shoes on. Walking barefoot on hardwoods exasperates the problem.
I have PF and I’m not sure this is universally true. Unsupportive shoes are definitely the worst trigger - but I find walking barefoot to be neutral. Even supportive shoes for long periods can result in a lot of pain but walking around my house with only socks on all day and sometimes I have pain and sometimes I don’t.
Anonymous wrote:We never took our shoes off growing up in New England. We were not allowed to walk around in just socks (slippers were ok). My Dad felt strongly that feet needed protection from stubbed toes, things falling, ???. We are a mostly shoes off family but never ask guests to do it, don't worry about a quick return to the house for something etc.