10/06/2026
The World Cup kicks off this week - so here's the football tradition we love most at Haus Maids. And it has nothing to do with the score.
Every time Japan play - not just on the World Cup stage, but week in, week out - their fans do something remarkable. When the final whistle blows, they don't bolt for the exits. They pull out bin bags and quietly clean their whole section of the stadium. Win or lose. They've been doing it for years, at home and abroad, and in 2018 the players even cleaned their own dressing room and left a thank-you note behind.
But the part we find genuinely lovely is where it comes from.
In Japan, children clean their own schools. It's a daily routine called o-soji - after lunch, the kids spend around 20 minutes tidying their classrooms, corridors and shared spaces themselves. It isn't about saving money on cleaners; it's treated as part of their education. The lesson is simple: if you make a mess, you clean it. Look after the spaces you share. Respect the people you share them with.
So those fans with the bin bags aren't doing it for the cameras. They're just grown-up versions of those schoolchildren, living by something they learned at five years old: leave a place cleaner than you found it.
That's our whole philosophy in one sentence.
We're not in the business of "good enough." We're in the business of handing a home back better than we found it - every single visit. That quiet, unshowy pride the world noticed in a football stadium is exactly what we try to bring to your kitchen, your bathroom and your floors.
Here's to a brilliant World Cup. And here's to leaving things better than we found them.