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In Japan, it’s slippers. In India, it’s sacred. In America, it’s somehow controversial. Why do we keep dragging Costco floors and bathroom germs across our living rooms?
Let me set the scene. I politely ask my friend to take off her shoes at the door. There’s a pause. Her energy shifts. She raises a perfectly plucked eyebrow and asks, “Oh, so … you’re one of those people?”
Yes. Yes, I am.
And so is most of the civilized, sanitized world.
But in America? This simple request is often met with a reaction like you asked them to reveal their browser history and not their socks. Travel to just about anywhere else on the planet, and leaving your mules on the mat isn’t weird. What is? Walking through someone’s home wearing the same shoes you wore into a public restroom, Costco, and a mysterious puddle outside of Starbucks.
Thanks.
You’ve just turned my carpet into Chernobyl.
So why is it here in America—land of the free and Febreze—that we’ve fallen so far behind?
The Rest of the World Just Gets It
Wearing shoes inside a Japanese home is like microwaving sushi: Yes, it’s technically possible, but it’s also socially unforgivable. Taking off your shoes indoors isn’t a suggestion—it’s an expectation and sign of respect.
There’s even a designated entry area to leave them that they call a genkan, which roughly translates to, “Live. Laugh. Love when you take off your shoes.” They also have a whole slipper system. You’ll often be offered one pair for the house and one for the bathroom.
That’s right.
There are toilet slippers.
I’m now looking into dual citizenship.
The same rules also apply in Russia, where they call their indoor slippers tapochki. Refuse to wear them? Babushkas gasp in horror. May your borscht always taste burnt.
When in India, you’re expected to take off your shoes before entering every home, and most religious sites and businesses. Simply put? Indoors is sacred. Outside is dirty. No one wants filth from your flats on their paratha or prayer mats.
It’s also the norm in Sweden. Feeling a bit sock self-consciousness? It’s not uncommon for the homeowner to offer you a fresh pair, which is somehow both polite and yet subtly judgmental.
The United States of Convenience
In countries where collective respect and cleanliness matters? People take off their shoes.
In a country where people bring full carts of groceries into the self-checkout line and then argue with an 18-year-old employee named Kylie? They don’t. Because in America, anything that requires five extra seconds of effort is often met with confusion, resistance, and possibly an existential crisis.
DoorDash on the couch? Sure. Therapy from an app? Sign me up. Taking your shoes off inside? Ain’t nobody got time for that.
But not everything convenient is good.
And not everything respectful is uptight or “weird.”
The irony? Most Americans do value cleanliness. We just like it to be convenient, on our terms, and preferably lemon-scented.
We’ll Lysol a countertop until it sparkles like the gates of heaven. Use hand sanitizer after touching a snowflake. And if I wiped my hands on a subway pole and then caressed your pillow, you’d call the police. But when it’s a shoe? Suddenly it’s, “No big deal! It’s just what we do here.”
No, Carol, from book club. That’s what you do.
And it’s weird.
Somewhere, a Japanese grandmother just fainted.
But when we resist these small acts of courtesy, what we’re really saying is: “My comfort and convenience is more important than your floor—and your simple request.”
Shoes: The Trojan Horse of Fashion
And also on a practical level—respect and courtesy aside—shoes are just really gross. No matter how stylish your slingbacks may be, they’re basically weapons of mass destruction. Studies have shown that shoes have millions of bacteria and toxins on them, including—but not limited to—E.coli, lead, and fecal indicator bacteria.
That’s poop particles, my friend. Poop. On my floors.
You’re essentially creating a microbiological crime scene across my living room rug. That rug didn’t ask for that. That rug was purchased on clearance from Kohl’s and already has enough insecurity issues.
And yes, I own a vacuum and a Swiffer with more frequent flyer miles than Taylor Swift. But prevention is cheaper than therapy. And by therapy, I mean scrubbing all my floors because Diane from the HOA “doesn’t do socks exposure.”
It’s not like I’m asking you to spiritually cleanse your sneakers with sage or scrub your soles with bleach. I’m simply asking you to take your shoes off when you enter—like a civilized, culturally conscious human being.
Leave Your Shoes—and Ego—at the Door
I realize that some people might still view this as slightly insane, but it’s about both cleanliness and respect. The simple act of slipping your shoes off says, “I will enter your home and honor your hygienic hardwood, your cushy carpet so clean you can—and inexplicably do—sprawl out at night and watch TV from the floor like a geriatric housecat. I will join your global sock revolution of comfort and cleanliness.”
If the rest of the world can do it, so can we.
Because sometimes the smallest pause—like untying your shoes—is actually the first (shoeless) step toward being a better guest, a more considerate person, or at least someone who doesn’t bring crumbs from a stranger’s food cart falafel into the house.
Walk a mile in my shoes and you’ll understand—but when you’re done, please leave them at the door.
I’ll provide slippers.
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