
Discussion
So true 👀
after most of 12 years in south eastern europe i 100% agree with this
probably did help that it was the custom in my dutch/indonesian grandparents house too, and then also i saw chinese doing it, what the fuck is wrong with you shooes inside motherfuckers?
though they are a bit strange about taking off your shoes outside... "ne napolje bos!" (not outside barefoot)
In the winter sure.
Otherwise we always encourage being barefoot outdoors in the garden.
Polje = field.
"Don't go in the field barefoot"
Kindof makes sense, ticks, snakes, etc
napolje is serbian for "outside", in bulgarian it's "vun" or "navun" (vutreshen vs vunshen inside vs outside)
but no, this was on the outer margins of a dense urban area, it's just in the culture there, i mean yes, sensible in winter and for actual agricultural areas but not in your backyard
the bulgarians were pretty full on about it too
it was hard for me to reconcile because as a child putting the shoes off and going out into the grassy playground was a daily routine... but again, me and the half tongan boy who i most vividly remember doing this with... the white kids didn't understand, and i look white but i'm black inside, and wearing shoes has always been a problem for me, especially because i have odd shaped feet that mostly are impossible to find shoes for
In Slovak and Rusyn napolje is in the field and vun and navun or von is outside. :)
We all understand each other anyway. Those of us that want to or make an effort. There are always some special Slavs that have a hard time "twisting their ear". Lol
When dogs sleep in the bed and bedroom lingerie is worn ouside almost like normal clothes, the lines between inside and outside can understandably become somewhat blurred.