| This is me and mi hermano Argentino, Ivan |
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| Düsseldorf Sunset |
Oh Dear Readers,
It has been a fantastic Advent Season here in Germany, and a time that I will miss very much. It’s a truly warming time and a time where there is always action in the streets, people bustling through to find just what they need, people gathering to drink and eat with their dearest friends and family, and people who have simply stopped by to enjoy and take in the most joyful time of year. The Weihnachtsmärkte are at their fullest and in every large city and small town, the streets are full. I am writing now to quickly sum up what has been with out a doubt my busiest three weeks ever. It has, at the same time, been some of the most memorable moments in my exchange. First and foremost, the exchange student who I have mentioned before, Ivan, from Argentina, has moved out of his host family and unfortunately, like Mary and Joseph were turned away at the hotels, although less holy and important, he was without a new host family here in Germany. So, though this is no barn, my host family very nicely reached out and took him in for the holiday season. He is like a brother to me and we get along very well, so it has been quite a pleasant experience and it has made the house a bit louder and fuller :). He is living in the basement for the next few weeks, and, just as life loves to throw new things at you, my host brother returned from his exchange in Costa Rica, and, with me living in his room, and Ivan in the basement, the house couldn’t get much fuller, and yet it did. It has been lovely, and the house is always abuzz. I would say that the adding of two new members was the most noteworthy news; however we have been up to much more. It has been the typical pre-Christmas season, desperately searching for a good gift, rushing around with the smell of good food and the warmth of the stores, and the family inside doors, sitting together playing a game or eating a meal. I have still been meeting the exchange students, who have become a real family to me, to bake cookies, go to Düsseldorf or hang out in the city, or go see a movie. Of course at the very least I got to meet up with a few of them to go to our German course every Wednesday. I have also met up with my great aunt who lives here in Wuppertal and I have gone with her to meet more family in Monchengladbach, a city who also has a top three soccer team. I have also begun to officially train with a Water Polo team. Water Polo would normally be described as hand ball in water, but unfortunately hand ball isn’t as well known in America, so basically I would describe it as basketball where you are swimming in very deep water and you shoot on a goal about the size of a field hockey goal. Its extremely hard work, because one can only have one hand on the ball at any given moment, and touching the ground or the sides is illegal. It’s been a lot of fun, plus it’s a year that is about uniqueness, so I might as well start a unique sport. I have been doing homework, and training for sports, and meeting friends, with not a second of down time. I haven’t even gotten to half of the things I wanted to do before vacation, but no matter, because everyday I opened another square in my Advent Calendar and got another chocolate, a sweet reminder that I’m moving closer and closer to today. All of December is dedicated to Christmas and the Christmas season, and all over in huge lights reads ‘Frohe Weihnachten’. Companies even use Merry Christmas on products and in lights and all over it is purely Christmas. When I told my host father that in America the companies always say Happy Holidays he was taken aback and laughed, but in the end he changed his companies Christmas email to be a Happy Holidays email. The immigrant and foreign population is growing in Germany, and there are many more religions and beliefs coming in, despite what people may think and what I had fewer thought. I have learned much more about Germany and it’s people, things I had never expected, things that make me proud to be of German heritage. Right now we are celebrating the three days of Christmas and then it is off to Paris between Christmas and New Years! But now I write to you all, after eating Raclette, opening our presents, which is done on the night of Christmas Eve, and playing games with meine familie. I write to wish you all a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays and to say that, even though I miss my family who are on the beach in Puerto Rico, and my friends who are back in the US, I am having the time of my life; A time where I try to hold onto every moment, a time where the memories are endless and incomparable, from the smallest things to the most major events. I have learned so much this Christmas and in my year here, so now I would like to wish you all a Frohe Weihnachten and I love you all.
P.S. I put this Stevie Wonder song in here because its seemed to fit to what Christmas is like here and its great.
















