• Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact

Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

  • Marriage
  • Parenting
  • Faith
  • Christmas

Advent

Advent
Advent

At chapel, we nearly missed it. There was a scramble for candles and a lighter that worked and some verses to say because Advent had slipped in somewhere after the turkey, and we had almost missed it.

…even though the Christmas music has been playing in the stores since October.

…even though Black Friday came and went.

…even though seven pastors at chapel were waiting for it.

We were all waiting for it. And somehow, we all missed it.  

Advent is like that: expected, but entirely surprising. All the time, we have known it was coming, and all the while, we were not ready.

We scramble, to be sure, and race and run and repeat traditions to try to be more prepared, for the love, because if we’re going to get one thing right, it is this. Christmas. Advent. We are going to be ready for Jesus, this time.

Advent

So we push everything earlier and begin expecting, waiting, wanting until we can hardly bear up under it.

This Advent is a heavy thing to carry for long. Something so full of expectation cannot be light. It bends us over with longing and trying. Oh, how we try. We try to be ready for Him. We try to be able to receive Him. We try to be worthy.

We try, and we groan under the weight of it. Awful expectation.

But suddenly, it is here. It is now. A Savior has come, and He steals our breath away like the sharp cold of an early morning. He comes in our darkest, in our weakest, in our least ready, because we could never be ready enough. All that trying, all that working, all that waiting is over as He rushes in with the Advent of rest, of abundant enough.

It is not about trying. It never was. It is not about ready. Who could be ready for a Savior? No matter how early we begin or how well we plan, we can never be ready enough for that. We can never clean up enough to welcome Him.

But when we are bent low with our workings and blinded by the futility of our own strivings, when we are empty of any other hope on this earth, we are most ready.

Advent

That is the trick of Advent.

And that is when He came. That is Advent: the coming of a Savior to those most needed to be saved, at the time when they most needed saving. At their darkest. At their lowest. At their least ready.

Into this world of constant-waiting and never-ready, He came. The weary world rejoices.

We can exhale now. We can stop, and wonder. In our weakness and divine unreadiness, we can welcome Him in.  Are you tired?  Are you behind before you have even begun?  Then you are ready.

His Advent is for you.   

Faith 2 Comments

The Black Dress

The Black Dress
How a Dress Can Change the World

Ever since I was a little girl, I dreamed of going to a ball. It was the influence of too many princess movies, I suppose, but I longed for that Cinderella moment when the skinny, freckle-faced girl I saw in the mirror was transformed into an elegant woman in a sweeping dress, my unruly hair piled perfectly on top of my head in one of those hairdos I could never get quite right.

I could never get any of it right. Not the gown, not the guy, not the ball. I never had a prom, or even a formal, and that one time I was a bridesmaid didn’t quite do it for me.

So when my husband told me he had a military ball coming up, I was ecstatic. I may have squealed. I already had my prince, and he would be wearing his dress blues with the squeaky black shoes he hates and the bow tie he hates more, and I would be the tall, slightly-less-awkward-than-I-was-at-twelve woman on his arm in that gorgeous gown I have fantasized about all my life. We would ride off in our pristine white carriage minivan while the kids fought over the last slice of pizza at home.

Except.

Except the more I thought about the dress thing, the less comfortable I felt about it.   I’m not sure how I could outgrow a dress I’ve never worn, but it seemed the dress I had in my head didn’t fit me anymore.

The Black Dress

I guess it’s because I’m a little wider in places than I used to be. My narrow, self-centered focus has broadened, little by little, until I can’t look at myself and my resources the way I used to. I can’t be that princess anymore, who makes people look up and gasp, “Who is she?” What I want is to bend down, so people look up and say, “Who is He?”

But it was just a dress, right? I would spend a hundred dollars—maybe a hundred and fifty, if I counted the shoes (and I always count the shoes)—so why did I feel like a new dress was a little too tight around the middle? And why did it feel a little scratchy under my conscience?  Perhaps someone who says she has my kind of eternal perspective shouldn’t be spending so much of her wealth on one night. Just to look pretty. Just to be seen. Just to drive past the homeless guy on the corner and wave and say, “Don’t worry—this only lasts ‘til midnight. I’ll be back to pray for you tomorrow.”

Somehow, I couldn’t find a dress to fit that.

And it bugged me because I really, really wanted a new dress. There is nothing wrong with going to a ball, I told myself. There isn’t. I just wished I could wear a new dress and be okay with it. I wished God would leave my global conscience alone for two seconds so I could spend my money without tripping over the homeless guy at Starbucks. But I couldn’t

Because there are hundreds of children in foster care in my town, and I’ve seen their faces. There’s a mama in my small group whose groceries don’t stretch out like the month does, and I know her name. There’s that man who sits outside my corner Starbucks with all his worldly possessions stacked neatly in a contraband grocery cart, and he blesses my kids when we give him bananas.

Because it’s not my money.

Because the only difference between me and them is the dividing line of grace.

Because Jesus was the heir of all things, and he didn’t even dress up for it.

Because little choices matter.

The Black Dress

The week of the ball came, and I spent a pitiful amount of time in front of my closet, praying. A six-foot tall woman doesn’t have a lot of options in the “borrowing ball gowns from friends” loophole, but still, I kinda hoped my Fairy Godmother would show up at the last minute with a Plan B. Because Plan A was an old, black, hand-me-down dress I kept rescuing out of the thrift store donation pile in case I needed it for a funeral. It is not a ball gown. It is not even a formal dress. But it does have to be dry-cleaned, so there was that.

And like it or not, that black dress fit. 

In the end, I had to wear it because the carriage minivan was leaving.

“You look nice,” my husband said as we got ready to leave. I had taken the time to Microplane the callouses off my feet for date night.

Still, I felt insecure. Terribly, terribly insecure. In the parking lot, I watched the other women go in before me. No one was wearing a funeral dress. Not one. I wondered if the servers could deliver my chicken option to me in the parking lot because staying in the van seemed like a really great idea.

Oh, it’s hard not to be vain. It’s hard not to care about what others will think, even when you believe you are doing the right thing. I felt a slight humiliation on my cheeks when I walked in to the ballroom looking every bit like the wife who didn’t get the memo about the ball.

The Black Dress

It was hard until I walked into the ballroom and saw the floor-to-ceiling windows looking out over the two cities, mine and the one just across the border where kids grow up looking over here and wondering why they were born on the wrong side of the border patrol.

Suddenly, my momentary “shame” was put in perspective.  It was nothing like the shame of a teenager who has to go to school wearing the same two things every day. My humiliation was nothing like the humiliation of digging through trash cans for food. My fear of rejection was nothing compared to the fear or hunger or cold or violence.

In fact, it was not really suffering at all. Because at the end of the night, when all the ball gowns swept out of the room and I went home to hang my dress up for the next funeral, I had something left. Instead of empty accolades that do not satisfy, I had resources to give to make a real difference in the world around me. It’s not much, when I think about all that needs to be done—but doesn’t change start there? Doesn’t compassion begin with the small choices to think of others’ needs before our own wants?

Sometimes I get tripped up, not just by the guy at Starbucks, but by the overwhelming sense of need in the world. I don’t know where to begin.  The need is so great, and I am so small.  I forget that something as small as a rudder can change the course of a ship, and something as small as a dress can make a difference in a world of need.  It is a beginning. 

The simple–although embarrassingly difficult–choice to wear an old black dress equates to a hot meal and gloves for the man at Starbucks.  It’s a smoke detector for the family trying to get a foster license. It’s a week’s worth of groceries for the mama in my small group.

It’s a dress that fits just right.

The Black Dress

“Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, bearing with one another…And above all, put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony.” Colossians 3: 12ff

Faith 12 Comments

(why) I Don’t Want More Kids

More kids

“Why do you want more kids?” people ask me when they find out we’re planning to adopt. “Don’t you think you have enough already?”

I don’t know how to answer this question because I don’t know how many kids is enough.

Do I have enough kids to drink all the milk before it goes bad? Yes.

Do I have enough kids to make our own basketball team? Yes.

Do I have enough kids to finance our orthodontist’s dream trip to the Caribbean? Yes.

So…is that enough?

I find myself stumbling over answers because the question is all wrong. It infers that the reason for having children is to fulfill something in us, and people should only have the minimum number it takes to be personally satisfied.

When people say to me, “Don’t you have enough kids already?” the assumption is that I am somehow unfulfilled by the number of children in my home now. I need more children in order to be happy, and isn’t that selfish and irresponsible of me?

Why on earth would I want more?

The simple answer is, I don’t want more kids.

I do not want to add broken children to my manageable home. I do not want to risk my own children’s emotional or physical safety in order to take on someone else’s “problem.” I don’t want to pour my heart into a child who might hate me in return. I don’t want the lice. I don’t want the attachment disorders. I don’t want the sexual aggression, the lying, stealing, manipulating—any of it.

I am not lonely, or bored, or in need of affirmation. I don’t want more kids because I have some kind of superhero complex, or because I’m such a great mother. I don’t want more kids because somehow, five kids is not enough. Oh, no. Five kids is enough, and some days, I am not sure I can handle one more.

(Of course, I said that when I had one. And I said it when I had three. And now I have five and I really, really think it’s true this time.)

I don’t want more kids because I think I can handle more. I know the truth: in my own humanity, in my own weakness, I can’t.

I cannot love more than enough children. I cannot have Christ-like compassion for the child who shreds me with her brokenness. None of us can.

What wrecks me is this: God doesn’t seem to be particularly interested in what I can handle. He seems to care more about what He can handle.

And that just blows the question out of the water. At the end of the day, fostering is not about me. It’s never been about me. It’s not about my ability as a mother, my desires as a human being, or even my comfort level as an American.

It’s about what God has called me to do through His power working in me to love my Savior by loving His children. It is the thing that makes the “wanting to” irrelevant and the “able to” inconsequential. God wants, and God is able. That is enough.

Enough kids

Enough kids

Do I want more children?

The only people who ask that question are clearly not God because that is not a question God ever asks.

God does not ask if we want to love unwanted children (James 1:27). He doesn’t even have the consideration to ask us if we’re able to. With all the audacity of the Lord of the Universe, He assumes that if we’re breathing, we can do better than just think of ourselves and do for ourselves because He did better, and it is His power at work in us equipping us to be and do like Him. Not our strength. Not our ability (Ephesians 3:20).

It’s scary to believe it. I do not like to jump into the unknown and hope to heaven I land on supernatural wings. I am afraid, and that fear would make me turn tail and run if not for this: my fears do not excuse my obedience to God.

Fears are the stuff of shadows anyway. Worst-case scenarios rarely happen. The worries I toss about in my head are minor in comparison to the actual, horrific suffering of real children, right now.

I look at my home, my godly, patient husband and my compassionate, loving children, and I know that I cannot allow imaginary hurts to keep us from infusing living hope into a child’s present, perpetual, real-life.

That doesn’t mean hurts won’t happen. We will do everything we can to prevent them, but love doesn’t always come out clean. Our five kids might feel the sting of it

But for our sixth child, it will hurt much, much less. Infinitely, eternally, less than life hurts now.

That is the thing that keeps me pressing forward when my heart fails. Do I want more kids? No.

What I want is to get to the end of my wants. I want to get to the end of controlling and taking on only what I can do. I want the immense privilege of seeing what God can do through me. That fills me with unspeakable, illogical joy at the prospect of being used as He wills. I have a Christ-like love for a child who is not my own and all the anticipation of Christmas at the gift—the privilege—of being his mother, no matter the cost.

Why do I want more kids?

That is why.

God is able

Faith, Fiction, Foster, Parenting 90 Comments

« Previous Page
Next Page »
I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

Recent Posts

  • Mr. Whitter’s Cabin
  • Stuck
  • When Your Heart is Hard Toward Your Child

Popular Posts

  • Mr. Whitter's Cabin
  • Stuck
  • When Your Heart is Hard Toward Your Child
  • Why She's Sad on Sundays
  • Failing Grade
  • I Should Have Married the Other Man

Sponsored Links

Copyright © 2025 Kristen Anne Glover · All Rights Reserved · Design by Daily Dwelling

Copyright © 2025 · Flourish Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in