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- From: Paul J. Lucas <go.away@no-junk-mail.org>
- Newsgroups: alt.lifestyle.barefoot,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.lifestyle.barefoot FAQ [2/2]
- Followup-To: alt.lifestyle.barefoot
- Date: 10 Dec 1997 12:10:02 -0800
- Lines: 437
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: 10 Jan 1998 00:00:00 GMT
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- X-Trace: 881784605 2979 pjl 206.184.139.132
- Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about living barefoot
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.lifestyle.barefoot:5823 alt.answers:30757 news.answers:118528
-
- Archive-Name: barefoot-faq/part2
- Posting-Frequency: monthly (on the 10th)
- Last-modified: 1997/06/06
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- SECTION 4: Getting by in a Shod World
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q14: What can I say to passers-by if they make a comment?
-
- If it's just a comment, ignoring them is always an option. If they ask
- a question, ignoring them is still an option.
-
- However, being polite usually helps and some barefooters have gotten
- into some interesting conversations. Maybe you can even make a few
- converts!
-
- The responses get nastier or weirder the farther down the list they
- are. It depends on your mood at the time. (Some of the responses can
- be used in response to more than one comment.)
-
- * _You're barefoot!_
- + You're not!
- + You're observant!
- + You're right!
- + Thanks for the tip.
- + No shit, Sherlock.
-
- * _Why aren't you wearing shoes?_
- + Don't like 'em.
- + They make my feet sweat/stink.
- + My feet like the fresh air.
- + My feet were hot.
- + One less thing to do in the morning.
- + Why aren't you wearing gloves [hat]?
- + To annoy people like you.
- + Why do you care?
- + I'm allergic to them.
- + I'm not wearing a tie either.
- + I'm off-duty.
- + I'm opposed to wasting petrochemicals/leather.
- + I'm performing a scientific foot-toughening experiment.
- + If I don't keep in contact with the ground, I build up a
- static charge.
- + My feet were jealous of my hands.
- + I'll give you three-thousand guesses.
- + They are a conspiracy by multi-national plastic and leather
- merchants.
- + I knew I had forgotten something!
-
- * _Why are you barefoot?_
- + I like the way it feels.
- + It's much more comfortable.
- + I think it looks cool.
- + I want to toughen my feet.
- + It's good for my feet.
- + Because feet are beautiful.
- + It gives me this wonderful feeling of freedom.
- + I want keep in touch with the earth.
- + Because I'm not wearing shoes [duh!].
- + Try and work it out.
- + Because I m not concerned with your contempt.
- + Dunno.
- + Because you don't pay my salary.
- + I'm in a time-warp from the '60s.
-
- * _Where are your shoes?_
- + At home [where they belong].
- + I don't know. [Have you seen them?]
- + Somewhere else.
- + What do you mean? These are God's Reeboks.
- + On vacation.
- + Don't have any.
- + My what?
- + What are shoes?
- + Up there. [Said while pointing up.]
- + Aliens took them.
-
- * _Aren't your feet cold?_
- + Not unduly.
- + No...My feet are _cool_!
- + Obviously not.
- + Aren't your feet hot?
-
- * _Nice shoes._
- + Thanks.
- + Very comfortable too.
- + Do you like them? My parents made them for me.
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q15: Is it legal to drive barefoot?
-
- YES!!! (At least in the United States, Canada, and England; I don't
- know about other countries.) The statement to the contrary is urban
- folklore and believed by so many people, even some police officers.
- However, if you call either your local or state police and ask them,
- they will say it's legal. If the cop on the phone says otherwise, ask
- him/her to give you the statute number. S/he won't be able to and then
- will admit their mistake.
-
- One guy actually did write to all 50 states asking the question. All
- the letters he received back are available via:
-
- http://www.urbanlegends.com/legal/driving.barefoot/driving_barefoot.ht
- ml
-
- Additionally, the _American Automobile Association_ (AAA) publishes a
- "_Digest of Motor Laws_" handbook that is a:
-
- Summary of laws and regulations governing regulation and operation
- of passenger cars in the United States, its Territories, and the
- Provinces of Canada.
-
- It has a "Barefoot Driving" entry for all states and territories; and
- for each it says: "Operation of a motor vehicle by a driver with bare
- feet is permitted."
-
- The 62nd edition has ISBN 0-916748-70-7. You can obtain a copy of the
- digest through your local AAA club. When I called my local AAA club,
- they were clueless about the fact thay they sell it. Be persistent. If
- all else fails, you can contact:
-
- American Automobile Association
- Traffic Safety and Engineering Department
- 1000 AAA Drive
- Heathrow, FL 32746-5063
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q16: Why don't many stores permit bare feet?
-
- There are a few reasons:
- 1. Mind-set. Some store-owners have hangups about bare feet for
- absolutely no good reason. Many people are brainwashed into
- thinking you _need_ to wear shoes. They just can't handle the
- concept of bare feet out on the streets. People tend to dislike
- what they don't understand.
- Note that mind-set varies with locale: In the Chicago area, for
- example, many large chain stores and supermarkets forbid bare
- feet. If you go to warmer climates like California or Florida,
- barefooted people are much more common so nobody thinks anything
- of it. Also, if store-owners chased out barefooted customers,
- they'd be doing that all day long.
- On a more global scale, countries like Australia and New Zealand
- are _very_ barefoot friendly. Many, many people go barefoot
- regularly everywhere. Nobody cares and they think it's completely
- natural (which it is).
-
- 2. Alleged health laws. I have written to my township and my county
- and state health departments. There are _no_ laws stating that
- customers may not be barefoot in _any_ kind of store _including_
- food-service establishments. I know others in other states who
- have done the same research: nothing.
- I know a guy who complained to the health department in CA about
- McDonalds displaying the sign, "No Bare Feet by Order of the
- Department of Health." It turned out that McDonald's removed the
- signs (in CA) and wrote a letter of apology to guy who complained!
- For an exercise, I called the headquarters of a large supermarket
- chain in the Chicago area. The woman on the phone was just as
- ignorant: she thought it was illegal to go barefoot into stores. I
- asked her to give me the statute number (knowing full well that
- she couldn't because it doesn't exist). She said she'd have to
- call me back. She actually did and told me that there is no law,
- but it's their "store policy."
- Of course, the bottom line is that a store-owner can refuse to
- serve you for any reason so long as it isn't sex, race, religion,
- veteran status, sexual orientation, etc, etc. Bare feet,
- unfortunately, are not "covered" by anti-discrimination laws. But
- you can spend your dollars elsewhere.
- As an aside, what does _health_ have to do with it? Do they sell
- food off the floor? Yes, when I go barefoot, the soles of my feet
- get very dirty...so what? Are shoe-soles any cleaner? Dirt is
- dirt. At least I wash myself daily which is most likely more than
- people wash the soles of their shoes.
-
- 3. Broken glass. Store-owners are so afraid that you will step on
- broken glass and sue them, that they just forbid bare feet
- altogether. In one respect, this is a ridiculous thing to say. For
- avid barefooters, broken glass is not too much of a problem. The
- soles of my feet are _very_ thick and tough, the way they are
- naturally supposed to be. I rarely injure myself with broken
- glass. The store-owners, however, don't realize this.
- In another respect, I do have some sympathy for them. The USA is,
- by far, the most "sue-happy" country in the world. And the worst
- part is that dumb-ass juries enable people to win! There was a
- case where one neighbor borrowed another's lawnmower. The guy
- decided that his hedges needed a trim, so he picks up the
- lawnmower while it's still running and, needless to say, injures
- himself very badly. He sued not only the lawnmower manufacturer,
- but also his neighbor for failing to warn him that picking up a
- running lawnmower was dangerous. He won! Given such verdicts, the
- store-owners are just protecting themselves.
- Even if I were to cut myself, I would not sue. I am a big boy and
- realize the possible consequences of my actions and realize that
- most things that happen to me are _my_ fault.
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q17: Which stores do permit bare feet?
-
- Despite the above answer, there are many stories you can go barefoot
- to. From my personal experience: most any (non-chain) shop in a strip
- mall, Baskin Robbins, laundromats, pizza joints to pick up your pizza,
- the Post Office, Subway, video stores, among others.
-
- I try to give these places my business. No shirt, no shoes, no money!
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q18: What do you wear when you are forced to wear shoes?
-
- Soft-soled (treadless) moccasins: there's just a thin layer of leather
- between you and the ground. Unfortunately, they don't work well when
- they get wet since they absorb water. For wet conditions,
- Birkenstocks. (I don't like rubber-soled Tevas because they make my
- feet sweat and _stink_ -- kind of against the whole point of wearing
- sandals.) I was able to find soft-soled moccasins at a
- western-clothing store. Another source is described below.
-
- [The following was contributed by Don Weber <ToughFeet@aol.com>.]
-
- Soft soled moccasins may be purchased from Tandy Leather Company.
- If there is no store near you, then request a catalog from:
-
- Tandy Leather Company
- Advertising Department
- Box 791
- Fort Worth, TX 76101
-
- They are a bargain at under $10. They come in the form of a kit
- that you sew together yourself with shoe laces. It's easy because
- the holes are already punched for you. Make sure you get the ones
- without those stupid hard soles stitched to them. The foam insole
- can easily be ripped out as well.
-
- Another good thing about soft-soled moccasins is that they can be
- folded up and easily stuffed into a fanny-pack. This way, you don't
- have to carry shoes, but you have them in case you are forced to wear
- them.
-
- [Don also likes Knoppy Birkenstocks.]
-
- Super Knoppy Birkenstocks may be ordered from any store that sells
- Birkenstocks. They rarely stock Super Knoppies because very few
- customers order them. Think of them as a sandal with very wide, but
- blunt and rounded, plastic nails sticking up from the footbed.
- These "nails" are called "knops." They breath better than any soled
- footware I know.
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q19: Is there such a thing as soleless footwear?
-
- _Bare Bottoms_ or soleless sandals
- They are really just a leather strap worn to make it appear to
- a casual observer that you're wearing sandals even though your
- soles and toes remain naturally and comfortably bare.
-
- Experience with them indicates that they do in fact fool
- people, the "No Bare Feet" crowd being the chief target. The
- theory is that an observer's brain doesn't notice anything
- unusual in peripheral vision, not enough to glance down. People
- who do glance down may feel too stupid asking a question even
- though they may realize that "something's wrong with this
- picture."
-
- You used to be able to get them from _American Science &
- Surplus_ in Skokie, IL; however, they're all sold out and no
- more are being made. The description:
-
- A pair of 1/2" x 33" leather straps with a
- buckle on one end and a couple of small slits
- with brass studs along the way. The idea was to
- thread the strap around your big toe and arch
- passing through the slits on the way. Viola!
- Something that looked like a sandal but wasn't.
- Perfect to get into a "No shoes, No service"
- spot. Made in 1967 for the anti-establishment
- soleless folks.
-
- and photo showing them being modeled (by me):
-
- ftp://ftp.barefooters.org/alb/barebots.gif
-
- should enable you to make your own or enable a local
- craftsperson to make you a pair.
-
- _Hawaiian Sno-Shoes_
- These are also a soleless sandal, but are more intricate than
- Bare Bottoms. They loop around your "index toe" and your ankle.
- A catalog of these, in various styles and colors, may be
- obtained by writing to:
-
- Hawaiian Sno-Shoes
- 301 Moose Hill Road
- Monroe, CT 06468
-
- A graphic is available at:
-
- http://members.aol.com/bhthom/hawaiian.htm
-
- _Barefoot Sandals_
- These are an even more intricate design than Hawaiian Sno-Shoes
- in that there is a portion that wraps up your lower leg. A
- catalog of these may be obtained by contacting:
-
- The River Studio, Inc.
- 1013 Azaleamum Drive
- Three Rivers, MI 49093
- (616) 273-2488
- (616) 273-3310 (FAX)
-
- There is also a Barefoot Sandals home page:
-
- http://www.horsetooth.com/barefoot/
-
- _Barefoot Gaiters_
- These are leather coverings for the tops of your feet and
- arches: the toes, balls, and heels of your feet remain bare.
- These are good for warmth. If you can't get these ready-made, a
- good leather crafter can make them for you inexpensively. Or,
- if you would like to make them yourself, there are detailed
- instructions on pp. 74-78 of _The Barefoot Hiker_ (see the
- Reference section).
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- SECTION 5: Reference
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q20: Is there anything written about bare feet?
-
- _The Barefoot Hiker_
-
- Author: Richard K. Frazine
- Publisher: Ten-Speed Press
- Year: 1993
- ISBN: 0-89815-525-8
- Price: $7.95 US
- Order direct: 1-800-841-BOOK
-
- It's a "how-to" book on barefoot hiking, a _very_ pleasurable
- experience. You get to _feel_ the ground, soft soil, grass,
- fuzzy moss, and mud squishing between your toes.
-
- But it's also on bare feet in general, thoughts, perceptions,
- attitudes, etc. It's a great little book...and at $7.95, it's a
- bargain.
-
- [See Q21 for information on how to contact Richard.]
-
- _The Barefoot League_
- This was an essay essay written in 1914 by James Leith MacBeth
- Bain. He wrote about both the pleasures and societal
- difficulties of going barefoot. It seems that some of what is
- true today was also true in 1914. The essay is available via:
-
- http://www.barefooters.org/writings/
-
- _Endangered Pleasures -- Bare Feet_
- There's a wonderful essay about the simple pleasure of bare
- feet in the book, "Endangered Pleasures," by Barbara Holland,
- Little, Brown, and Company, 1995, ISBN 0-316-37057-6.
-
- It expresses the way I and many other barefooters feel. An
- excerpt of this essay is available at:
-
- http://www.barefooters.org/writings/endangered.html
-
- More information about the book is available at:
-
- http://www.best.com/~pjl/personal/books/index.html#endangered
-
- The rest of the book is well-written and humorous; I highly
- recommend it.
-
- _Dirty Sole Society Writings_
- The Dirty Sole Society (see Q21) has a web page where member
- writings have been placed; a sort of a "best of" collection.
- Also on the same web page are some writings of other
- barefooters as well as links to "The Barefoot League" and the
- Bare Feet essay in "Endangered Pleasures" mentioned above.
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Q21: Are there barefoot groups?
-
- Yes. There are a group of barefooters on the 'net:
-
- _The Dirty Sole Society_:
- The Dirty Sole Society, of which I am a member, is a group of
- folks who prefer life unshod. There is a "recruiting" ad posted
- monthly to alt.lifestyle.barefoot and to other newsgroups.
- Watch for it! Or, you just write me. An excerpt from the ad:
-
- Real-life stories, experiences, trip-reports,
- thoughts, feelings, and tips having to do with
- bare feet and barefootin' as well as upcoming
- barefoot-related events are the sort of
- material we discuss.
-
- They also have their own web page:
-
- http://www.barefooters.org/
-
- that, among other things, has trip reports along with photos.
-
- _Barefoot Hikers_
- These are groups of folks who prefer to hike barefoot so they
- can _feel_ the various textures of the ground. See the main
- Barefoot Hikers web site for chapter locations:
-
- http://www.barefooters.org/hikers/
-
- _Barefoot Waterskiers_
- These are people who love the indescribable rush they get from
- feeling of the pressure and flow of the water's surface as
- their feet glide over it. They have their own web page:
-
- http://waterski.net/foot/BarefootPage.html
-
- _Windjammer Barefoot Cruises_
- Windjammer Barefoot Cruises <windbc@windjammer.com> is a
- company that has cruises on masted sailing ships wherein you
- are _encouraged_ to go barefoot the entire time. How about
- that? A vacation especially for barefooters! Write them for
- more information or visit their web page:
-
- http://www.windjammer.com/
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- END OF PART 2
-
- END OF DOCUMENT
-