The clouds, grey skies and drizzle have made a sudden return into my life: It's strange being back in London.
Boris bikes are definitely uglier than Barcelona's alternative. Red buses, red telephone boxes and red letter boxes stand out more than they used to. Everyone speaks English, no one looks you in the eye, museums are free and so is water.
I feel somewhat like a tourist in my own city.
2 days down, 12 to go and, although I'm beginning to feel at home in Catalonia, I'm so happy to be back with my family to celebrate Christmas. How relaxing it is not having to explain that mince pies are in fact a pudding and mincemeat's vegetarian. Here it's normal to set Christmas pudding on fire and no explanations are needed at the mention of a cracker. Then again, I guess crackers and Christmas pudding are a lot easier to comprehend for the foreigner than the Catalan traditions of placing a pooing man (aka: "el caganer") in their nativity scene and teaching their children to feed up a log with a smiley face on it (aka: "el tió") and then sing asking it to poo them presents on Christmas day...
Well, despite all these weird and wonderful traditions, our celebrations are linked together by one mutual thread. We're all celebrating Christmas, and we will all most probably be hearing the Christmas story told over and over again: God becoming man in order to restore our broken relationship with him. Maybe we're numb to it because we hear it every year, but there's something pretty amazing about that story. This year I challenge you to really listen to it and give Jesus a chance. Decide what you think about the little baby whose birth we celebrate every year all over the world, as I believe what you think about this baby has the power to change your life...
This week the whole world's been talking about the one Mayan prophecy about the end of the world, which didn't happen. Yet in the Bible there are over three hundred prophecies about the coming of a saviour which were written hundreds of years before Jesus's birth and that were fulfilled in the birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus.
...Why aren't we talking more about that?
...Why aren't we talking more about that?