Sunday, April 19, 2009

In Japan people take off their shoes and wear slippers almost everywhere, don't their feet ever smell?

When at home they don%26#039;t wear shoes or use socks or slippers. They even provide visitors these slippers. How often are they washed?

In Japan people take off their shoes and wear slippers almost everywhere, don%26#039;t their feet ever smell?
It is a tradition in Japan. When I visited Tokyo,


my friend offered slippers and asked me to


leave my shoes at the main door. They do not


give their slippers to guests. Separate slippers


are kept for visitors which are vashed after the


visitors leave the house.





In traditional houses of India, no one is allowed


to come inside the house with any foot wear.


They have to leave them outside the main door


and wash their feet before entering the house.


The dust on the road is supposed to have psychic


or para-normal effect on babies and aged in


the house. Modern science says that there are more


germs in the dust on the road than in the mild dust


found in a sweeped room. This tradition is being


observed since millenia in India.
Reply:Actually, Japanese don%26#039;t smell ever, usually.


The weather is moist in Japan, so they are accustomed to keep their bodies and houses clean and nicely dry always.
Reply:Well...I think that your feet began to smell because of the lack of circulating air around the feet so if I am correct wearing shoes would make them smell not going without.
Reply:the slippers are washed often, alot of households use throw away slippers.
Reply:They wear socks and sandals at home, the sandals aren%26#039;t street shoes but just for in the house. I think it%26#039;s a great idea not to track street dirt into your house. And the Japanese wash EVERYTHING. They%26#039;d never, ever give you a dirty pair of socks or slippers to put on. And what%26#039;s your point anyway?



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