Whatever you're facing...
Heaven Can Begin Now
The Last Sunny Day
My pension in Geneva was a large third-floor apartment on rue Charles Bonnet, home to eight
female students from five nations. The landlady, Madame Brulhart, was a tiny, excitable woman
who called us "mes enfants" and rapped briskly on the bathroom door if the tub water ran too
long.
John's pension was half a mile away on rue Calvin. We'd been told that Geneva in the fall
would be rainy, but the sun was out when he parked his bicycle outside Mme. Brulhart's one
Tuesday morning shortly after university classes began.
"This may be the last sunny day," he said. "We can make up European History, but we might not
have another chance to bike out and meet the country people."
We missed a lot of European History that September, as one cloudless day followed another,
but we got to know Alpine villages, ruined castles, and each other. "It's the last sunny day!"
John would call up to my window as he balanced his bike at the curb. And we would set out,
with a baguette of bread, a wedge of Gruyere cheese, and a pad of paper. We talked to
dairymen and pig farmers, cheese makers and wood-carvers. I was exploring a new country, a
new culture -- and for me something even newer. I was discovering what it was to wake in the
morning and fall asleep at night with a single person on my mind.
Years later, reading about Christ -centered lives, I understood how someone could "pray
without ceasing." It wasn't a question of effort. They were in love; they couldn't help
themselves.
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