How to be a Baka Gaijin (in the House)

In our last edition of how to be a baka gaijin we explored the fine art of being a baka gaijin on trains. So you’ve made it through the grueling ordeal that is your train ride and you’ve finally arrived at your destination. What’s this? You’re staying with a nice Japanese family for a homestay? How delightful! Your own private audience for your finely tuned baka performance. Let’s get started.

1. Don’t Bring a Gift

The first situation you’ll run into at a Japanese house is entering the residence and meeting the family who has been so kind as to take you in for a while in this strange new country. Should you bring them a gift? No way! Simply by being there, you are providing them with the best gift at all – your baka gaijinity. There is no way they’d be offended that you didn’t adhere to the custom of bringing a small gift such as alcohol, chocolate, or a souvenir from your home country when visiting a house in Japan. They should be giving you a gift for gracing them with your presence.

This is a surefire way to let your homestay family know right off the bat that you have no idea what’s going on. Not bringing a small gift to show your thanks for them putting up with your baka gaijinity for however long you are there is a pretty lousy thing to do. But if you want to lull them into a false sense of security with your manners, you should definitely provide them with a small gift of gratitude before you surprise them all with our next tip.

2. Wear Your Dirty Shoes in the House

Immediately after presenting your gift (or not) you should romp right into the house with your wet and muddy shoes. Japanese people love to clean and they will be delighted to know that you were so excited to see the rest of their beautiful home (which they just recently cleaned for your arrival) that you just could not spare the time to take off your filthy shoes. By the time one of the children hints at you that wearing your shoes inside is a no-no, you’ve already covered a good portion of the house in your baka gaijin filth. Well done.

Pretty much never do Japanese people wear shoes inside their homes. It’s usually slippers (more on that later), or socks in the home, so wearing your outdoor shoes inside a residence is a great way to show off how baka you are. Usually homes will have house slippers for themselves as well as their guests right near the entryway where you didn’t take off your shoes, you silly gaijin, you.

3. Wear the Bathroom Slippers Around the House

So you finally took off your dirty shoes and you realize that you haven’t gone to the bathroom since you arrived in this strange new country. You ask where the bathroom is and you rush right in. Upon arrival, you notice that there are a pair of slippers in here. How convenient! You just learned about these earlier. So you slip on the slippers, do your business, and prance right out of there like royalty, still in the slippers. You know, the slippers that are only meant to be worn while in the bathroom because, you know, people pee in there.

You may find yourself asking how much more complicated can household footwear get? Well after you see the horrified faces of your homestay family when they realize you’re wearing the toilet slippers around the house after they just cleaned the floors from your earlier incident, you’ll know just about all you need to know concerning footwear etiquette in the house. Maybe next time you should just leave the bathroom slippers where they belong, okay?

4. Get Extra Comfy Around the Dinner Table

By this time you’re probably pretty hungry. And probably pretty sick of everything that has to do with feet and the things that go over them. It’s time for dinner and you sit yourself down on the floor by the dinner table. Even though everyone else is sitting seiza or Indian style, you decide to show everyone your endless capacity for baka gaijin-ness and sit all sprawled out with your legs stretching under the table and your feet pointing at and sometimes touching the members of the family. Why try to conform now when you’re already so far down the path of baka gaijinity?

By this point you’ve probably realized that a great thing to do in unfamiliar situations is just to do what everyone else is doing. Follow the social convention. The best way to be a baka gaijin is to just do your own thing and totally ignore anything you think might be customary in this new land. Pointing feet at people and especially touching other folks with your feet is pretty darn rude. Oops.

5. Hog the Bathtub Because You are a King (or Queen)

Dinner is over and sleepy-time is fast approaching. What do? Take a bath of course! The family graciously offers to draw a bath for you and allow you to be the first one to take a bath that evening. Show them what a baka gaijin you are by not even thinking about allowing one of them to take the first bath – no one deserves it as much as you do! Remember, you are a gift to this family. Once you get into the bathroom, be sure not to wash yourself off before getting in the bath, you’re clean enough already. Time to take a nice long soak in the tub. Afterwards, be sure to pull the plug and drain the water. It’s not like there’s a whole family of people planning to take a bath after you, right?

Okay, so usually families will use the same bathwater for everyone’s bath since they will usually wash themselves off first in a shower separate from the tub. That way when they get into the tub, they are already clean and they don’t dirty the tub water with their human filth. So in a way, your draining the tub kind of saved the family from bathing in your filth and experiencing the wrath of your baka gaijinity. Well, half of your baka gaijinity anyway.

Su Casa es Mi Casa Baka

By performing all of these acts you will have made it very, very clear to the family what a baka gaijin you are. Especially if you manage to pull all of them off in the same day (impressive!) So next time you are in Japan, remember how to act on a train, but also remember how you should act once you get to your destination as well. Make every house your own personal baka house**


So now you know how to be a baka on trains, and also how to be a baka while in a Japanese house. Have you ever accidentally made any of these mistakes while in Japan? Tell us your story in the comments! (Don’t worry, it happens to the best of us.)

Also, if you want a more straightforward post about how to behave in Japanese households, it’s laid out pretty plainly in this post from VipJapan.


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**Please realize that this post is mostly satire and is supposed to be funny. I am aware that gaijin are not the only ones who perform the faux pas in this series of baka gaijin posts. They are just meant to draw attention to some mistakes people might make while in Japan in a humorous manner.
Hugs and kisses <3 J

  • Nelly Nell

    It’s only normal in the houses of people from the Carribbean in Brooklyn. A lot of the times it’s rude to take off your shoes in another person’s house here and being barefoot is a bad thing.

  • Bmm209

    If you’re an guest staying overnight, are you expected to use the same bathwater as the familys’?

  • belgand

    Yeah, I have a number of friends who support the idea of taking off your shoes, but to me it’s just disgusting. Shoes must be kept on in the house and taking them off is just incredibly rude. Please be overly familiar and just put your filthy feet all over the place.

    I don’t care about the supposed dirt coming from outside. What I care about is being protected from your horrible feet and not looking like some half-dressed slob. Shoes should be mandatory.

  • Nelly Nell

    Well
    1) Somebody has to wash those socks. It’s probably your mom and she’ll be pissed
    2) I was always told that if you walk around barefoot, you’d catch cold
    3) My mom always gave me the talk about when she was a kid in the south, she’d have loved for her parents to have enough money for her to always have shoes

  • Bird. J. M.

    There’s been a baka gaijin detected in the comment section

  • Ali

    I really love all your “How to be a Baka Gaijin” articles! I have some suggestions I would really enjoy reading (of course, no pressure or anything hehe). Some suggestions would be: How to be a Baka Gaijin when making friends, when shopping, when singing karaoke, things like that. Please do make more of these whether mine or yours (^~^)
    Also, does anyone have any good websites for self-teaching Japanese? Please do tell~~

  • Lewis

    Perhaps it’s just that Americans generally don’t consider wearing shoes in the house to be that big of a deal. It’s not at all uncommon to take off your shoes in someone’s house.

  • Somebody. o_o

    Yeah. Here in America, I live in a family being from vietnam…. they don’t want ANYONE walking in the house with dirty shoes on, because my family doesn’t want the floor to be all dirty so that we have to clean it AGAIN. Its not odd to me. O_E

  • Guest

    Same in Canada! I have never ben in a house where you didn’t take off your shoes! If anything the americans are the weird ones for neve taking them off..

  • Yatsuki

    Well there are modern tables now and some seemingly Japanese household tables even have a hole beneath the table so it looks like you’re sitting seiza style but actually sitting with your feet down.

  • Scarred Sword

    Canada too, from what I understand.