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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Dandelion Bouquets

 

Dandelion Bouquets

“Mom!  Mom!  I have something for you!”

It is Jonathan, charging in to my place in the kingdom where I am wrestling with a vacuum cleaner and thinking about scrubbing toilets.  He smells like outside and boasts a green smudge on his knee where his jeans used to be.

“These are for you, Mom!” he says, thrusting a beautiful bouquet of spring flowers into my hands.  His fingers are grubby because he’s been collecting worms again. They match the muddy spattering of freckles that are just beginning to make their summer pilgrimage across his nose.

Jonathan smiles.  “I picked them for you,” he says, using the same phrase he has used every year when the earth wakes up and flowers grow where the snow drifted deep.

Dandelion Bouquets

The same little hands—bigger now—have picked countless bouquets, and little feet—bigger now—have run up countless steps, eager to share the breathtaking beauty with me.

This time, it is a wild assortment of dainty bluebells, snow-white camellias, restless dandelions, and one cheeky blue pansy from the flowerpot by the back deck.  I notice he’s included a few specimens I’ve never seen before.

“Those are from Mrs. Smith’s yard,” he says, pointing to some flowers I hope grow profusely.

“They’re beautiful,” I say, and he nods because he knows.

“I’ll put them in a cup!” he says, grabbing the flowers back and charging out of the room.

I come down a minute later to find Jonathan with a jam jar, carefully arranging the flowers so the blue touches the yellow and the pink settles in against the white.  “I like arranging flowers,” he says with a shrug, because an eight-year-old boy with a birthday in two days can’t very well say he likes arranging flowers without a shrug that says he doesn’t.

It is beautiful.

I stare at it a moment and marvel.  Dandelions and bluebells, a wisp of a white-flowered weed and a pretty pink camellia, all nestle in to the same cut glass jar because they are beautiful to a boy who has not yet been told any different.

Dandelion Bouquets

I realize I am partial to dandelion bouquets.

A bouquet like that means there is a child in my life who hasn’t been taught what beautiful is, and isn’t.  It is the priceless kind, brought in by grubby-handed boys with green smears where their jeans used to be.  It is the kind that is selected by sweet-smiled children who forget not to pick the neighbor’s flowers because they are filled up with the happy task of gathering all that is beautiful and bringing it in to the one who is the most beautiful to them in all the world.

A few years from now, the world will try to tell that boy what beauty is, and isn’t.  But for now, I have a jam jar on the kitchen table and the dandelions and camellias are keeping company.  I have a boy, two days shy of nine, who brings me beautiful flowers because he thinks I am beautiful.

For now, I have a boy who doesn’t know any different.

*100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: 37

100 Days of Motherhood, Parenting 4 Comments

A Day at the Sea

The ocean is the first thing I see every morning when I come downstairs to make my morning coffee.  Some days, it is sleepy-eyed under the covers of the clouds, or restless and wild with the wind.

But today, it is radiant with the sun and full of all the beauty of the sky.  The clouds themselves have been lured into the waves, and held there, contented prisoners of the blue.

Clouds in water

It is hard to stay inside on the days when the ocean looks so lovely, and is so loved.  Something in me is compelled to stand on the shores and delight in the union of sun and sky and sea.

Picnic by the sea

So we put the school books away and pack a bucket and a trowel and a bit of lunch, just in case.

Kayak Point, WA

We bare our toes to spring sunshine

and embrace the possibility of sandy footprints

Boy in the ocean

and saltwater kisses.

Kayak Point WA

We find the particular joy of wave-tumbled rocks,

fresh from the deep,

and the sharp welcome from barnacle domains,

crusted high.

A day at the beach

We are embraced by the sea, which understands the briny adventure that is boyhood,

Kayak Point

and the singular beauty of little girls, who in all their moods, are ever more captivating with each turn of the waves.

Kayak Point, WA

There is something sacred here, and we drink it in,

here where sun and sky and sea meet

in a kind of holy trinity,

and each member is made more magnificent

by of the magnificence of the others,

until I do not know which I like best,

the sun,

the sky,

or the sea.

Five in Tow

Breathless is the beauty that makes us more beautiful, this ocean,

full of a loveliness that makes us more lovely.

You cannot be ugly at the sea.

Fingerprints of God

It is full of the poetry of Creation,

and all around I see the hand of the Creator,

who presses His fingerprints into the shells on the shore,

and burns His glory onto the waves of the sea.

Kayak Point, WA

It is as if Heaven has come down,

a rush of eternity into the depths of the sea,

and all of its glory has been broken open

by the thorns that pressed in

in their attempt to hold it back.

Kayak Point, WA

But those sharp shards of hate and sin and death,

pressed too hard.

They pricked Heaven and burst it open

until the sacred rained down

all over thirsty earth,

which waited, parched and trembling,

for such a salvation.

Kayak Point, WA

We find it here–heaven–right here where sun and sky and sea come together,

in a kind of holy trinity.

We gather up the bits of it,

like manna,

and let it feed and fill and drench us,

Kayak Point, WA

until we are altogether changed.

*100 Days of Motherhood, 36

100 Days of Motherhood 10 Comments

Red Hair Like Me

100 Days of Motherhood: 35

Mom, can I sit on your lap?” Paul asks, stroking my arm.

His face looks a little more big-boy than I remember because just yesterday, Daddy took a scissors and snipped until bright red curls covered the kitchen floor.  It was necessary because the boy could barely see.

But I’m partial to bright red curls and baby-faced boys, and I can’t help feeling a little sorry about how grown-up he looks.

“You want to cuddle with me?” I say to the grey-blue eyes that look up at me.

Paul nods, making his face long in an attempt to look as pathetic as possible.

It works every time.

I nab him up into my lap and squeeze him tight.  Paul’s dimple shows because I fell for his trick.

He drapes a lazy arm around my neck and says, “You smell adorbubble,” and gives me an impish smile that lifts up the freckles on his cheeks and makes me want to kiss them.  I can’t resist that.

“Ack!  Kisses!” he squeals, but he turns his cheek toward me instead of away.

Redhead and freckles

We sit together rocking, we two. His hair tickles my nose and he strokes my arm and I think about how I have almost used up all the cuddle time I have been given because he is bigger today than he ever was before.  Soon, he won’t fit on my lap.  It is almost over, and I don’t want it to be over, not yet.

I wonder at how I’ve changed, how these five little people have worn away the parts that didn’t fit.   When I first became a mother, the constant closeness with another human felt suffocating.  Someone was on me all the time, and I was desperate to be able to carve out a little space in the world to be alone.

I’d listen to the clock in the hall and watch the birds fly outside the window while I waited, weighed down with nursing or a child who wouldn’t sleep and I’d think about how I couldn’t wait to put that baby down, shake out my arms, and be free.

Now here I am, holding on to this boy who loves to hold on to me, and I do not want to be free at all.

Time is funny that way.  It wears you in.  It makes things fit that once rubbed you raw.

Of all my children, it is Paul who has worn down my independence the most because it is Paul who lingers closest.  It is Paul who is so unlike me in his need for nearness.  It is Paul who makes me think I’ll miss these days when I can hardly get a moment to myself.

Redhead boy

Soon, I will miss these days. 

I stare at his face and try to remember the first time I saw him.  It is a hazy dream because of the medication and the fierce lights of the operating room that made it hard to open my eyes, but if I try, I can be right there in an instant.

“This one has red hair!” the nurse exclaimed.  Just seconds before, Paul’s twin had flown by my eyes.  I had only a moment to stare in wonder at Micah before Paul came bellowing through, but that was long enough to know that Paul had red hair and Micah did not.

“Do any of your other kids have red hair?”

“No!” I said, and laughed out loud because I had always wanted a redhead, and it was just like God to give me that frivolous little gift just because, at the end, like a love note pressed into the hand when the good-byes are being said.

That red hair was just for me.

Redhead boy

Paul knows it, and he holds it in his eyes like a secret.  “We have red hair, right Mom?” he says, and grins with a grin that is two parts mischief and one part reckless, unbounded joy.  He can’t hold in a giggle.  It bubbles up from deep in his belly and ripples through the house.

I smile every time I hear it because that is Paul.

Paul who thanks God every night for the pretty horses and Jesus dying on the cross.  Paul who once burst into tears in the middle of Rite Aid because Kya told him she wouldn’t marry him that day.  Paul who can’t talk to me without touching me.  Paul who wiggles and squirms next to me in church until I am exhausted and he is content because he knows we are close.

We are not very much alike that way, I’m afraid. 

Sometimes, I step back when he reaches out for me.  Sometimes, I tell him he must stop tugging on my pants.  Sometimes, I tell him I want him to go outside.

Then he looks at me and says, “But Mom, if I go outside, you will be all-a-lonely,” and the mischief goes from his eyes and I know he’s aching for me because he is too little to know that we are different.

He can only see how we are the same.  He wants us to be the same.

And I wonder at God who has the sense of humor to give me a boy with my red hair and a personality so unlike my own. It is the truer gift, I know, to give me a child who can’t let me indulge the selfishness and independence that is my tendency.

Because Paul has sharpened me, like iron to iron, and I have become a little less reclusive, a little less independent, a little less ready to shake out my arms and be free.

By the grace of God, we are becoming more the same.

In fact, I think I’d like to stay here for a while.  Maybe there is time to linger a little longer with a little boy who has red hair just like me.

 

100 Days of Motherhood, Uncategorized 18 Comments

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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.

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