Psychology says adults who keep separate indoor slippers and outside shoes aren’t obsessed with cleanliness, they are drawing a boundary between chaos and peace

Most people think adults who insist on wearing separate indoor slippers and outside shoes are simply neat freaks. But psychology suggests the habit often goes far beyond cleanliness. For some, it is about hygiene. For others, it is an invisible boundary that separates the outside world’s chaos from the comfort of home. It is a small ritual that signals to the brain that one environment has ended and another has begun. In a world where work emails enter bedrooms, social media enters dinner tables ..
Their brains may crave a sense of control in an unpredictable world
Psychologists often talk about the concept called the Illusion of Control. Humans naturally seek ways to feel stable when life becomes uncertain. Small daily habits provide a sense of order. Keeping outdoor dirt outside is one example. When adults consistently separate indoor and outdoor spaces, they create one area they can fully manage.
The world outside may be chaotic, but their home environment remains predict
