Jessica and I are sitting in my room, drinking hot chocolate, doing homework, and complaining about seeing pictures of snow in Oklahoma while there was none here in Strasbourg. Pulling up her weather app, Jessica dictates the predicted temperatures for the week and sadly notes that there is little to no chance we would be getting snow any time soon. Minutes later, as I turn back to my computer and reload Facebook, my Strasbourg classmate's post screams loudly at the top of my newsfeed: "Il neige!!!!! It's snowing!!!!" I gasp and tell Jessica as I run to open my window - and discover that it is indeed true: many small snowflakes are floating down from the sky. Jessica and I giggle and squeal excitedly like little girls opening their first Christmas presents of the year. Jessica leans her head out my window and exclaims to the world, "IT'S SNOWING!!!!!"
I run downstairs (it's time to eat dinner anyways) and run outside, joyously looking up at the snow falling onto my face, laughing and smiling irrepressibly. As I walk to the cafeteria, I see my dear friend Vanessa - I grab her by the shoulders and we start jumping up and down together as we repeat "Il neige, il neige, il neige!" in sing-song voices. The man in the front office laughs at our silliness but we don't care because we're so ecstatically happy from the little pieces of white, sparkly heaven drifting down from the dark night sky.
By the time Jessica and I finish dinner, the snow has almost stopped. It's lighter and not as easy to see. I'm still happy but my excitement is slightly dampened by the fact that the flakes got smaller and not bigger, as I was hoping. Another hour of homework later, I head out to meet some friends at a café. As I step outside, I am greeted by huge, fluffy snowflakes everywhere. My "short" walk to the café ends up taking twice the amount of time because I stop to (attempt to) take photos of the gorgeous snow and the cathedral in the background... My phone gets wet, my fingers are freezing, and the white flakes are sticking to my eyelashes, coat, and hair, but again my child-like wonder and cheek-to-cheek smile isn't dampened one bit. Only minutes after I arrive at the café, the snowflakes are again small and hard to see. I think God did that specifically for me... to bless me because He knew it would make me incredibly happy.
I enjoy a coffee and good conversation with my sweet classmate-friends as we celebrate Yasmina's birthday. Afterwards, as we walk to the tram stop together, we cross through one of the main squares in downtown Strasbourg, Place Kléber. Still in the process of being decorated for the huge Christmas market that starts on Saturday, all the Christmas lights on the surrounding trees are strangely already lit. We take multiple pictures and enjoy walking through the square, and right as we get to the other side, all the Christmas lights turn off. I don't know if they are testing the lights to make sure they work, or if they just turn off at a certain time, but either way I'm again astounded at God's desire to make me smile. Those lights didn't have to be on right at the moment I walked through the square...but they were. And that made my evening all the more magical. :) (Thank you, God). :)
We sing "Happy Birthday" to Yasmina and then part to go our separate ways, and as I walk back to the Foyer where I live, I sing Christmas songs under my breath and smile up at the sky. Now I'm in my room writing this with a mug of Apple Spice tea in my hands, my mini-Christmas tree lit and Josh Groban's Christmas CD playing softly in the background.
Never lose that childlike wonder. It makes life so much happier. :)
Que Dieu vous bénisse,
Marie












