It really depends, it's a comfort thing. I don't wear shoes whenever I get home because my home is mostly carpeted and warm. Whenever winter rolls around though I prefer to wear shoes, or socks simply because my feet get cold.
Heh, you're kidding me, right?IndomitableSam said:We aren't neanderthals here in Canada, either. You take your damn shoes off in my house... And everyone else's house, too.
Please tell me you mean you stub them a lot and thats a typo? O-oCasual Shinji said:I tend to stab my toes a lot. My shoes stay on!
Also, I find it dirtier to have my shoes off - Dust and indoor muck'll stick to my socks or bare feet. Nasty! Don't even get me started on stepping in a wet spot in the bathroom.
I live in the Northwest of England also and I can vouch that it is indeed wet and miserable all the time but I tend to wear shoes anyway, unless my shoes get wet.Diluted Dante said:Who say's a mess is being made? I hoover the house once a week. That is all that is needed to keep it clean. I live in the north west of England. It rains a lot. Fortunately though we replaced our mud tracks with pavements.excalipoor said:The kind of shoes that take 10 seconds to put on, and less than that to take off. The kind that weigh about a pound. The kind I wouldn't want on my couch, my carpets, my bed, or in my bathroom. It's not like I run in and out every fifteen minutes, so why would I not take them off? Because it does affect my comfort greatly. I wear shoes at school, at work, while running errands, and just running. They're the first thing to come off as soon as I get home.Diluted Dante said:Because wearing shoes really isn't something that affects your comfort greatly. And if it is, what shoes are you wearing exactly?
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If I feel cold when at home, I get a blanket or turn up the heat. I'm not going to wear a coat indoors. The same goes for shoes. Also, why would you choose to clean up after yourself or others, when you could just not make a mess? Either way, I don't know what the weather is like where you're from, but around here a vacuum cleaner is only going to save you on a dry midsummer day.
I can see how someone would find it awkward when a visitor they don't know takes their shoes off, but how often are you visited by people you're not familiar with? And how often do these people come in beyond the foyer?
Please note, I'm not saying that EVERYONE MUST WEAR SHOES. I'm saying that I don't get why people think it's weird to wear them inside. I think we can agree though that anyone wearing their shoes to bed is a bit odd.
Speak for yourself, yankee.Realitycrash said:I'm pretty sure it's commonplace in most Western nations. We're not Japanese, and we don't have a ritualistic point of view on wearing shoes indoors.
Just on that Sheldon point, someone else may've mentioned this too, if everyone else were wearing their shoes inside, wouldn't he want to do the same to avoid the germs they're bringing in?Realitycrash said:In multiple instances of US media, I've seen characters wear shoes inside a private home.It always struck me as odd; Why would one wear it? For comfort? Isn't it more comfortable without the shoes..Or with slippers?
And hey, don't you realize that it is DIRTY? What especially baffles me is that Sheldon and the others in Big Bang Theory wear shoes inside the apartment, even with Sheldon's extreme germ phobia. Isn't this exactly the sort of thing he would crack down on?
So, my question is; Is this really common-place in the US, and why? How do you feel about it?
A lot of that relates to how TV is made.Realitycrash said:In multiple instances of US media, I've seen characters wear shoes inside a private home.It always struck me as odd; Why would one wear it? For comfort? Isn't it more comfortable without the shoes..Or with slippers?
And hey, don't you realize that it is DIRTY? What especially baffles me is that Sheldon and the others in Big Bang Theory wear shoes inside the apartment, even with Sheldon's extreme germ phobia. Isn't this exactly the sort of thing he would crack down on?
So, my question is; Is this really common-place in the US, and why? How do you feel about it?
I know it isn't here in Canada. I have noticed this before I always figured it was a US thing.Richard A. Kiernan said:I'm pretty sure it's commonplace in most Western nations. We're not Japanese, and we don't have a ritualistic point of view on wearing shoes indoors.Realitycrash said:In multiple instances of US media, I've seen characters wear shoes inside a private home.It always struck me as odd; Why would one wear it? For comfort? Isn't it more comfortable without the shoes..Or with slippers?
And hey, don't you realize that it is DIRTY?. What especially baffles me is that Sheldon and the others in Big Bang Theory wear shoes inside the apartment, even with Sheldon's extreme germ fobia. Isn't this exactly the sort of thing he would crack down on?
So, my question is; Is this really common-place in the US, and why? How do you feel about it?