I know one couple that broke up because the guy didn’t like taking of his shoes and his girlfriend required it?
I too always end all of affirmative sentences with an interrogative punctuation?
Again, we’re operating in an alternate universe in this thread. No concept is real. Just mutually agreed upon. Only raw existence is real, and raw existence is only found in absence of language and numbers. So forget about what you think you know and what you think you are.
After you step in dog crap, vomit, smashed up worms, and whatever else is outside on the ground, I don't want you tracking it into my living room carpet or onto my furniture (because I know you'll put the feet on the furniture if you'll wear shoes in the house).
When I lived in Japan, they went a step further: you didn't just take shoes off in the house, you wore a separate set of shoes (technically, flip flops) only in the house; no bare feet.
I know one couple that broke up because the guy didn’t like taking of his shoes and his girlfriend required it?
Nobody makes me because I do it voluntarily, because I grew up with some class and was raised to be aware of cleanliness. I don't like creating unnecessary work for another person. I don't like making a person clean up after me. Likewise, if someone comes into the place where I live and makes a mess and doesn't seem to notice or care, I have a tendency to not like that person. So I don't want to be that person.
There are various degrees of this but I try to be considerate within reason.
I know one couple that broke up because the guy didn’t like taking of his shoes and his girlfriend required it?
Nobody makes me because I do it voluntarily, because I grew up with some class and was raised to be aware of cleanliness. I don't like creating unnecessary work for another person. I don't like making a person clean up after me. Likewise, if someone comes into the place where I live and makes a mess and doesn't seem to notice or care, I have a tendency to not like that person. So I don't want to be that person.
There are various degrees of this but I try to be considerate within reason.
And that reminds me of a similar situation I encountered not long ago, where a friend and I went to a restaurant, and afterwards my friend wiped all the crumbs off the table onto the floor so he could put his laptop there and do some work. And I remember thinking wow, what a jerk. But not everyone thinks that way. But certainly if I were someone working at the restaurant who had to come sweep it up, I would think so, even if that was part of my job. Just observing someone casually create a big mess for someone else to clean up and have the least bit of concern about that does kind of infuriate me.
After you step in dog crap, vomit, smashed up worms, and whatever else is outside on the ground, I don't want you tracking it into my living room carpet or onto my furniture (because I know you'll put the feet on the furniture if you'll wear shoes in the house).
When I lived in Japan, they went a step further: you didn't just take shoes off in the house, you wore a separate set of shoes (technically, flip flops) only in the house; no bare feet.
I also think it’s courteous if you’re a man to pee sitting down when in someone else’s home. Otherwise your pee is splashing all over their toilet rim and bathroom floor. Gross!
We offer people slippers when they enter out house, so they can have comfortable footwear and don't troop sht into our house and onto our carpet.
Simples.
Sharing slippers is gross. The purpose of a floor is to get dirty. The thought that a floor needs to be kept clean at all costs seems weird to me. You sweep and vacuum when needed.
After you step in dog crap, vomit, smashed up worms, and whatever else is outside on the ground, I don't want you tracking it into my living room carpet or onto my furniture (because I know you'll put the feet on the furniture if you'll wear shoes in the house).
When I lived in Japan, they went a step further: you didn't just take shoes off in the house, you wore a separate set of shoes (technically, flip flops) only in the house; no bare feet.
I also think it’s courteous if you’re a man to pee sitting down when in someone else’s home. Otherwise your pee is splashing all over their toilet rim and bathroom floor. Gross!
My father taught me to hit the target I'm aiming at. I guess you missed that lesson?