After a day of smiling at strangers, trying to follow the Chinese wisdom of Michael Puett’s The Path, I came across Calvin Trillin’s essay for The New Yorker – Imaginary Mitzvahs – and my true self reverted to type.
When I travel, I often tear out essays I want to read again from The New Yorker, before recycling the magazine to a flight attendant. Trillin is one of my favorite funny cynics, and his litany of good deeds gone undone restored my cranky equilibrium. But I did have a good laugh.
In Imaginary Mitzvahs, Trillan reviews his attempts to be a good person. When he graciously moves to a middle seat on the plane between a woman holding two crying babies and “a man whose stomach hung over the armrest” to accommodate the two men who “hadn’t seen each other in years…{this} flight is the only time we have to catch up,” he notices one man falls asleep throughout the flight and the other reads.
When he obliges his newly gluten-free vegan cousin by foregoing the sumptuous meaty French meal he had anticipated, his taste buds suffered but he felt virtuous.
Finally, when a cat in a fiery building needs rescuing, he resists – despite his inclination to do good.
There is a limit, after all.
Have a laugh – Read the essay : Imaginary Mitzvahs
And if you have not read Trillin’s Tepper Isn’t Going Out – my favorite book, here is my review: Tepper Isn’t Going Out
He’s great – so funny! And I’ve wondered the same thing when I’ve seen the commercials! Me and Calvin – great minds think alike! 😋
Thanks for posting this!
He always puts me in a good mood. Glad you like him too.
Thanks for sharing. A fun story indeed. I’ve never read The New Yorker other than some articles online. Is it worth buying a copy, you think? To try it out?
I’m a regular subscriber but they pile up and I tend to read them in a binge read in the plane. You might wait until you see a good cover to buy one – but most of the covers are pretty good. Hope you try it.