Is it normal that my daughter's shoes smell like death?

My daughter just turned 12, and more and more lately her shoes have smelled like DEATH. My son had smelly feet, but with hers we have no choice but to make her keep them outside - keep in mind, this is a 4-month-old pair of sneakers, worn only with socks. We've already had her checked and she has no infections or other illnesses. My friends can't give any info. Are some kids just like this, or should I look into it further?

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36% Normal
Based on 22 votes (8 yes)
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Comments ( 39 )
  • leggs91200

    Sketchers brand shoes tend to get that really god-awful sewage smell. No one knows why. I would bet money that those are what your daughter has for shoes.

    It is true that any pair of shoes will have some funk to them but Sketchers are the WORST. Washing them does not help. The only remedy is to stay away from that brand.

    I have owned a couple pairs and both times - unbearable stink. ANY other shoe brand is fine.

    On the subject of tennies, I recommend Saucony. Stylish, durable, excellent bargain, and no odors aside what is normal.

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    • SwickDinging

      I'm so glad that someone else has noticed this. I've said this before and people look at me like I'm crazy

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      • leggs91200

        Oh no, if you google it, it is a known fact, and nothing can get rid of the stench.

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    • Nikclaire

      Nonsense. I wear sketchers and they dont reek. Perhaps you all have fungus foot.

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    • Clunk42

      I'd argue that New Balance makes the best shoes.

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      • leggs91200

        I have never tried them, but this is not the first time I have heard good reviews, I think my room mate likes them.

        Reebok quality sucks anymore (uncomfortable), Nike is WAY over-priced (gotta pay for celebrity endorsements) and ugly as sin, etc.

        I think one of these days I shall try New Balance myself.

        Not that it matters but my favorite brand of high heel wedge sandals is Born (aka BoC) because the style and comfort. Sadly, the quality is very hit or miss.

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    • Did you own them as a kid or an adult?

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      • leggs91200

        Adult, about 10 years ago. Never in my life have I had shoes smell that way. I was a kid in the 80's and not even sure if Sketchers (nor Saucony) existed.

        If your daughter has Sketchers, there lies the foot odor problem.

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  • TerriAngel

    DIO has a valid point.
    Its not people who smell bad, its the bacteria.
    For some reason Asians dont have this problem.
    As for ole stink foot.
    1, 2 pairs of shoes.
    one to wear, one in detox.
    rotate daily.
    2 The freezer kills most foot odor bacteria.
    3 Soak feet weekly.( 20 min.)
    Or as needed in a bleach water solution. It kills the funk and seams to prevent issues for a few days.
    4 Antipersperant, buy a standard deodorant but use it on the feet.
    if more is needed.
    Degree brand clinical strength.
    It cost more, but it can stop even the worst case.

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  • notsaying4life

    Looks like someone needs multiple shoes

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  • LornaMae

    Does she wear the same shoes every day? What's the climate like where you live?

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  • FromTheSouthWeirdMan

    You're gonna have to shoot her. There's no other way.

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    • MizzKillah666

      😂😂😂😂😂

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  • Leapfrog00

    If she’s 12, her body is probably changing. With these changes, like everyone else’s body, I imagine she probably sweats. A lot of people think that sweat is what causes feet or shoes to stink. Sweat itself causes no bad smells. Say for example someone’s feet have a stinky smell. It’s actually bacteria from socks and/or shoes and since feet have 250,000 sweat glands, bacteria gets attracted to this sweat and with bacteria attached to the sweat from wearing shoes or socks or both, that’s what causes feet to stink. When I played baseball, our coach always said it was healthy for our feet to stink. According to him, it broke in our shoes and it meant our feet were healthy. If her feet smell like ammonia or vinegar, that means she’s healthy. My best advice though, if it does start to become bothersome, tell her to wear another pair of shoes for a couple days to give time for the other ones to air out. Then keep switching back and forth every 3 days. If that doesn’t help just a little bit, it could be athletes feet or some kinda fungus. Remember showing every day does not get rid of foot fungus. Everybody has it and it’s normal. It’s normal for people’s feet to have a weird funky smell. Good luck.

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  • Mammal-lover

    I own own some nike basketball shoes I wear for work and holy fuck do they stink. I've never had stinky feet but those shoes are nasty!

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  • bigbudchonga

    Look into it more, dude. The example you give of them being so bad that you have to keep them outside is far from normal, and quite possibly indicative of an underlying cause.

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  • private3

    The key is to let them dry out fully between uses. You can do this either by buying a second pair of shoes, and wearing them on alternate days, or by putting them somewhere warm and well-ventilated overnight.

    You can also try sprinkling laundry stain remover (containing enzymes and sodium percarbonate) in the shoes.

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  • Grunewald

    Odour-eaters. You can get them from supermarkets. They're like shoe insoles - just slide them in.

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  • charli.m

    Some people just create more stink. I used to look after a kid who had stinky feet and shoes at 18mths. I had never experienced that in such a young child before. He did only have the same one pair of shoes at a time, but even his sandals stank.

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  • Ellenna

    Have you tried sprinkling carb soda in her shoes? That's pretty good for absorbing odours in other places (eg fridges) so maybe it could work in shoes as well?

    If the shoes and/or socks are synthetic that could be a contributing factor, because non-natural fabrics etc don't let the feet breathe as well as natural.

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  • Boojum

    Our daughter is a few years younger than yours. Ours has some pretty serious BO issues, but foot odour doesn't seem - knock wood - to be a particular problem for her.

    However, we know from talking to other parents of kids in roughly the same age cohort that some kids go through a phase when they're really, really stinky. I believe it's a hormonal thing, and girls seem to be just as bad - if not worse - that boys. Once the upheavals of puberty settle down, the stench should recede.

    What we find odd about our daughter is that she's genuinely nose-blind when it comes to her BO. It's like she hasn't yet developed the olfactory sensors to detect her stink. This, too, is something we've heard from other parents about their kids.

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    • My parents had the sweat glands removed from my armpits when I was like 14 I think?? I wasn’t a smelly kid they just did it for my siblings and I so we wouldn’t have to worry about it.

      Seems kinda drastic but I mean hey it worked

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      • LornaMae

        That's some of the weirdest shit I've ever heard. (and I've been on IIN for a good 7, maybe 8, years).

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        • Really?? Lolll I didn’t think it was that weird at all, just assumed it was something people did if they could

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          • LornaMae

            I don't know if I can, tbh, because I sweat all over my body, not just armpits. I don't have a strong smell though. I just sweat so much that when I was in theater it made me have to retouch my makeup way more often than my fellow actors.

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      • SwickDinging

        I didn't even know you could do that! Do you find that you sweat more in other places because of it?

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        • I wouldn’t say so, the only places I ever really sweat would be on my chest but I think my neck sweats more than the average person, nothing a towel can’t wipe off though.

          I don’t think it’s an expensive procedure either, I don’t remember much of it because it was so long ago but I know I went to school the next day so it wasn’t a big deal

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          • LornaMae

            I just remembered you can actually get botox on your armpits for that and that it isn't that uncommon.

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    • Same with ours and her shoes. She can literally stand right next to them and not flinch. lol

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    • DIO

      You can't smell your own body odor or people wouldn't stink in the first place...
      THINK

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      • Clunk42

        You can indeed smell your own body odor. I'm speaking from experience here.

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        • DIO

          What you are smelling are the gas released by the bacteria you have from not washing and sweating. Not YOUR body odor. You can't smell your body odor.

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          • Clunk42

            That's what body odor is.

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            • DIO

              On a technical level, it's not.

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      • Boojum

        I suspect you're assuming that what applies to you must apply to everyone, but that's not true.

        The sense of smell is a strange and very personal thing. We all have particular sensitivities and other things we're nose-blind to, and most people will pretty quickly stop smelling a particular odour if it's always there. Some people can reek of artificial scents to the point that those around them are gagging, and some people are indeed oblivious to their own BO.

        I'm aware when I'm starting to stink. What usually happens is that I catch a little whiff at some point - maybe when I come indoors after breathing fresh air - and all I need to do is point my nose towards my armpit and sniff to confirm that it's me.

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        • DIO

          As I said, this is not YOUR odor but the odor of bacterias emiting gas. I know what I'm saying.
          You can smell the odor on your body but not YOUR body odor, which is something you always have even after a shower. This is the same thing that makes animals recognize you by scent.

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        • Bazinga

          Interesting digression, but in the essence of all this chemistry are feet. And, when kids don't soap them up twice in the shower, the skin flora starts creating its own equilibria with its own pH, and its own happy chemicals, which have propagated themselves to the shoes. At this point, wearing the shoes will recolonize her clean feet.

          Get creative. Throw out the shoes; bleach her socks. Make her soak her feet in vinegar everyday. Hopefully, some sort of kinder, more fragrant probiotic will fill the vacuum as well as her new shoes.

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