It occurred to me how preachy my last post came
across. Not the first or last time I rode the preacher’s revival bus. I must
have been one in a past life, though for the life of me (this life) I don’t
remember. But I do recall both my parents, at times, suggesting I get off the
preaching pedestal. That I did this as a wee toddler is charming and alarming
at once.
I have a vivid recollection of trying this maneuver on
a red-faced lady who was already pouring her day’s frustration on a little
girl. Buses in Jerusalem were often crammed-full of sweaty passengers, riding
sardine-tin style, and elbowing their way at their stop to the exit door,
sometimes with brute force. Working people getting home at the end of a day, or
making their way to appointments downtown, experienced the bus ride as one more
ordeal they had to survive.
By the way, that child was little me.
“I’m so, so sorry. Really,” I said. “Is the tip of my
nose disturbing your eggplant?”
The lady was speechless.
To be truthful, I stole that line. The day before, someone explained to me that in England, unlike in Israel, people were immensely
polite. I was given an example of a “vedy
British” line that went something like-- “Pardon me. Is my eyeball disturbing
the tip of your umbrella?”
I envied the British for this, so I single-handedly
went about britiifying my town, starting with the huffy lady on the bus. The
lady’s face turned a good match to the tomatoes in her bag, and my mother
elbowed me. Hard.
That failed childish effort is an excuse for what I do
today, preach and teach. I long to do good and I yearn for fun. The two don’t
have to be mutually exclusive.
I have some venerable company in this~~~
“Do
the right thing. It will gratify some people and astonish the rest.”
Mark Twain