Question Author
I hope, j2buttonsw, that your response was intended to be humorous rather than indignant, because it was not my intention to cause offense. The advice I put to you was precisely what I was given by medics and read on medicine instruction sheets when I once contracted athelete's foot while abroad. Washing thoroughly is advised. Only you know how you wash and if an adjustment in technique can help with smelly feet (regardless of to what degree or where the advice comes from) then I imagine that is worthwhile. We all use public toilets at some point (shops, stations, motorway services, etc.) and seeing men delicately wet two fingers of one hand under the tap is, frankly, bizarre. Significant numbers perform and leave without even this little ritual (my wife tells me things are not a lot better onthe ladies' side), and we then have to open the door they touched ..... According to historians, people in this country and elsewhere in Europe literally stank until, relatively recently (royalty and aristocrats kept moving between residences because they could no longer stand the stench of their own detritus - minions spent months cleaning up). While elsewhere in Europe washing ALL over using sope is mandatory before entering a swimming pool, one very rarely sees the practice even suggested here. Unfortunately hygiene cannot be taken for granted. Rev Crowley wil apparently only make an exception for mosques. I am no expert on religious customs, certainly not non-european ones, but my guess is that removing shoes on entering a home is a custom which pre-dates Islam because it is so widespread in non-muslim areas. So far only one reason (smelly feet - thanks to one courageous person) has been revealed, but WHY is this habit, of keeping the shoes firmly on to the point of religious rigidity, so difficult to shift ? I really would like to understand.