I follow this person on Twitter, and I'm sure she means this literally, and I'm OK with it.

  • Chronicon [they/them]
    ·
    10 days ago

    I don't wear shoes in the house but I don't think there's much validity around cleanliness

    uhhhh

    you definitely track in dirt and dust and whatever's on the ground outside (snow, broken glass, dog shit, road salt,), if you wear the same shoes outside and in.

    It doesn't necessarily make the person dirtier but it definitely makes the house dirtier IMO. Not by like, a ton, if you clean regularly its probably fine esp if you don't have carpet, but I still am not a huge fan. The "tracking in bits of broken glass" thing actually happened to me recently. Bunch of car break-ins on my street and a few days later I start finding pieces on the ground in my apartment.

    • HexBroke [any, comrade/them]
      ·
      10 days ago

      I am fortunate enough to not have to deal with snow, broken glass, dog shit, road salt etc. I was pretty shocked at how dirty some cities were when I went to the US.

      I do a full change when coming back from walks (~ hikes ~) because I have indoor cats and who knows what I'd be tracking in.

      I also have a Chinese robo vac/mop that gets heavy usage because the cats like to drag their food outside their bowels and leave bits of crusty meat on the hardwood floors.

      • Chronicon [they/them]
        ·
        10 days ago

        The worst part is my city is pretty clean for the US lol. But yeah snow is just unavoidable if the climate is right for it, everything's getting a bit wet at least. (unless you are a bougie MFer with indoor parking and snow removal service and basically go from house to car to office without stepping foot outside, which some people do.)

        And besides a few times a year to clear grime and rotten leaves and dirt and keep the storm drains flowing, the streets don't really get actively cleaned here except by random passers by, so those accumulate some level of things like broken glass, bits of trash, etc. Dog poop is not a common problem for me, but for people who have dogs and aren't perfect at cleaning up their yards after them its much more common.

        I don't know what level of street cleaning other countries have, or whether they just have a more conscientious populace, but yeah parts of the US are filthy

        • HexBroke [any, comrade/them]
          ·
          9 days ago

          I live pretty centrally so these workers are out every morning at around 4-5am

          Show

          Suburbia gets cleaned every few weeks, but increasingly less with budget cuts

          I am a bougie motherfucker but to the extent that I can walk to work

          • Chronicon [they/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            9 days ago

            we get a bit of stuff like that in the central business district, but its more like low wage workers going out and picking up trash than a full sweeping of streets/sidewalks. outside downtown its what I mentioned before. to some extent its because of low density, but also just public services are a joke in the US.