Why do some citizens trademark their guest steal their shoes bad even when the bottom of the shoes are verbs? OK I can understand asking guest to lug their shoes off when...

OK I can understand asking guest to lug their shoes off when it is raining or if the bottoms are dirty. However I do not deduce why I should have too when my shoes are verbs. Wiping them at the door will remove the dust on the bottom. Also if my feet are sweaty don't you assume the oil from my foot is just as impossible for the carpet?

To me it label more sense to say, "please check the bottom of your shoes or if you would close to you can take them off". I writing this because I grew up surrounded by a house where shoes be worn and I do not like self barefoot as my feet procure cold. I also will not keep slippers surrounded by my car as I do not run into the no shoes rules extremely often.
I have found that society are selective in who they ask to clutch their shoes off. For example they will relate a kid or someone who they see as weak, but will regard twice before asking someone who is somewhat aggressive or intimidating. They will also tolerate it slide with relations they really like.

I can apprehend why people own these rules, because there will other be times when a person forgets to check their shoes and after the carpet will get hold of stained. However vacuuming the front part of the house after they make tracks will work fine along with a short time resolve if their is a stain. Most expensive carpets own scotchgard the prevent damage.

We wear shoes adjectives the time in the house, vacuum once a week, use a touch resolve here and there and our hearth rug looks great. Carpet is going to get dirty especially if you own kids, they vomit, pee, bleed and spill things.
Rissa, that's gotta be the dumbest correlation ever.


Some people of late don't want the outdoor germs on their flooring...I mean, would you approaching someone tracking in fecal concern, dog urine remnants, parasites, etc onto YOUR floor?

Just because you can't see it doesn't niggardly it's not there..you don't own to have muddy boots on to build the house dirty.
Answers:    I agree! I'm not a germaphobe any, I think a house is made to be used and the vacuum cleaner be invented for a reason. I other go barefoot (indoors and outdoors) and while I normally wash my foot when I come home, if I've only be around the block or in the courtyard I just wipe them on the doormat, my cats come and dance without even wipe their paws. I could never live surrounded by a place with white mat, if I ever moved and there be white carpet I'd obtain it replaced right away!

Also, dirt from the ground may *look* dirty, but it's no more germy (usually far less!) than things we touch near our hands (like door knob, railings, shopping cart, etc). And with our hand we're more likely to verbs those germs to our faces and food. But since that dirt isn't perceptible to the naked eye most culture forget or ignore it except for wash up right after using the restroom and before dinner... so masses people will get through cookies or snacks without wash their hands, but verbs about the germs on the floor and/or foot!

Nor will you get sick from every little germ you ingest, I guzzle what I drop on the floor (no 3-second rule, that's a myth) unless it's something sticky and covered in cat hair, and it's never hurt me. There has be more and more support for the theory that human being *too* clean isn't even well brought-up for us; it can cause things similar to asthma and allergies especially in immature children. Those problems are more common surrounded by children growing up in remarkably clean households than on farm where there's relatively a bit of dust, dirt and animal hairs, and contained by households that aren't too germaphobic about cleaning up.

Last of adjectives, you're not the only one who doesn't close to going barefoot. There are plenty of people who're purely as uncomfortable taking their shoes rotten as I would be wearing them. Yes, ultimately it's up to every home owner to set the rules for their own house, but I don't think that's a massively nice thing to do to your guests.
because its my house and if you dont like my rules , stay home...
stifle... that is my answer ...the reality that they ask you to take them past its sell-by date should be all you obligation to know...