Anonymous wrote: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.
People have smelly feet BECAUSE they wear shoes and socks too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue blood easterners in the business and professional classes would think it exceptionally gauche to remove shoes and walk around a house in barefeet or in sweaty socks.
Maybe I’m not blue blood or east coast enough, but I don’t wear shoes inside my own house but not because of hygiene, just comfort. I don’t expect guests to remove their shoes and don’t find it appropriate unless they’re close friends and it’s a less formal gathering. If it’s raining or sloppy outside, I think people do generally take their shoes off if it’s easy. But it’s definitely not a hard and fast rule.
I get Asian cultures that have been doing this for centuries insisting on it. But people not from a culture like this just come off as pretentious and/or irrationally afraid of dirt when they insist that guests remove their shoes.
Irrational?
No, irrational is wearing your footwear outside where you're stepping on feces, vomit, spit, human waste, animal waste, pollutants, dirty, mud, grime, insects, and then still thinking there is no problem wearing that in your house. So nasty. That's what's really irrational.
What kind of hellhole do you live in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue blood easterners in the business and professional classes would think it exceptionally gauche to remove shoes and walk around a house in barefeet or in sweaty socks.
Maybe I’m not blue blood or east coast enough, but I don’t wear shoes inside my own house but not because of hygiene, just comfort. I don’t expect guests to remove their shoes and don’t find it appropriate unless they’re close friends and it’s a less formal gathering. If it’s raining or sloppy outside, I think people do generally take their shoes off if it’s easy. But it’s definitely not a hard and fast rule.
I get Asian cultures that have been doing this for centuries insisting on it. But people not from a culture like this just come off as pretentious and/or irrationally afraid of dirt when they insist that guests remove their shoes.
Irrational?
No, irrational is wearing your footwear outside where you're stepping on feces, vomit, spit, human waste, animal waste, pollutants, dirty, mud, grime, insects, and then still thinking there is no problem wearing that in your house. So nasty. That's what's really irrational.
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 do find it entertaining how defensive shoes on people get on this website. I wonder if there are people who start this thread every month or two just to see how riled up they can get these people, LOL!
Anonymous wrote:We take our shoes off, but we are from Europe. Americans just don't have the same culture of cleanliness that Europe and Asia does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue blood easterners in the business and professional classes would think it exceptionally gauche to remove shoes and walk around a house in barefeet or in sweaty socks.
This is it exactly. I’d never thought of it like this, but my Dad would be so confused and a bit offended if you asked him to remove his shoes. And the whole “barefoot is a class below me” side had never really occurred to me but….it tracks. A bit of the WASP culture.
Anonymous wrote:Flooring gets SO dirty and stained from shoes on! Never mind the germs. We were shoes on growing up and it was gross. Shoes off!
Anonymous wrote:We take our shoes off, but we are from Europe. Americans just don't have the same culture of cleanliness that Europe and Asia does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue blood easterners in the business and professional classes would think it exceptionally gauche to remove shoes and walk around a house in barefeet or in sweaty socks.
Maybe I’m not blue blood or east coast enough, but I don’t wear shoes inside my own house but not because of hygiene, just comfort. I don’t expect guests to remove their shoes and don’t find it appropriate unless they’re close friends and it’s a less formal gathering. If it’s raining or sloppy outside, I think people do generally take their shoes off if it’s easy. But it’s definitely not a hard and fast rule.
I get Asian cultures that have been doing this for centuries insisting on it. But people not from a culture like this just come off as pretentious and/or irrationally afraid of dirt when they insist that guests remove their shoes.
Irrational?
No, irrational is wearing your footwear outside where you're stepping on feces, vomit, spit, human waste, animal waste, pollutants, dirty, mud, grime, insects, and then still thinking there is no problem wearing that in your house. So nasty. That's what's really irrational.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blue blood easterners in the business and professional classes would think it exceptionally gauche to remove shoes and walk around a house in barefeet or in sweaty socks.
Maybe I’m not blue blood or east coast enough, but I don’t wear shoes inside my own house but not because of hygiene, just comfort. I don’t expect guests to remove their shoes and don’t find it appropriate unless they’re close friends and it’s a less formal gathering. If it’s raining or sloppy outside, I think people do generally take their shoes off if it’s easy. But it’s definitely not a hard and fast rule.
I get Asian cultures that have been doing this for centuries insisting on it. But people not from a culture like this just come off as pretentious and/or irrationally afraid of dirt when they insist that guests remove their shoes.