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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Foolishness {Day 1}

When I am old, I will be the kind of woman who smiles at young mothers and tells them to enjoy their babies.  I will tell them to hug their children tight, laugh more, and worry less.  I will not forget that parenting is hard, and I will not be so foolish as to tell a mother with a screaming two-year-old that she will miss these days.

But when I am old, I will remember that I did not always enjoy my children, and I will wish I had.  I will remember that some days, I thought it was enough that my children were loved.  It was enough that they were cared for.  It was enough that we made it through the day and I had not yet been committed to an asylum.

I will remember that in my heart, I was jealous of my husband who could walk in the door from work and wrestle children without any thought to whether they’d be too wound up to go to sleep.  I was envious of the grandmas and great-aunts and darling old neighbors who could simply be with my children without any thought to what had to be done.

I will remember that I acted as if enjoying my children was a nice “extra.”  But it wasn’t always as important as the laundry.

When I am old, I will have learned that enjoying my children is not an extra.  It is essential.  It is transformative.  It is powerful, and it cannot wait until they are older and it is easier.

Still, I have been a young mother, and I know that words like this from an old woman are not always welcome.  A young mother will think it is hard enough to keep up with all the demands of motherhood without having to like it, too.  It is hard enough to get through some days without completely losing it; the idea of enjoying the children in the midst of the mess is unfathomable.

But when I am old, I will have learned that this is exactly the point.  Anyone can enjoy her children when it is easy.  Anyone can smile when the family photos are being snapped.  I certainly did that much.  But to enjoy a child who is cold and distant, who can never seem to obey, or who just makes the messes messier…that is foolishness.

It is a foolishness that captures the hearts of our children and breathes the aroma of Christ into our homes.  It is a foolishness that gives real hands and feet to love and chases insecurities away.  It is a foolishness that raises motherhood from an out-of-fashion role to a means by which the world can see the very image of God.

There is something other-worldly beautiful about a mother who delights in her children.  It smacks of the self-sacrifice and unconditional love we hear so much about but rarely see.  In that simple, flesh-defying act of enjoying her children, a mother demonstrates the very heart of God for His own.

It is hard.  It is foolish.  It is glorious.

When I am an old woman, I will remember that I didn’t always enjoy my children the way I should have.  But by the grace of God, I learned.

This is the introduction to our new series, 30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More.  Please join us tomorrow as we jump into the practical side of enjoying your children more.  Coming up, Day 2: Perspective.

Parenting 29 Comments

10 Things to Do with Unholy Amounts of Candy

In just a few hours, our house is going to be filled to overflowing with Halloween candy.  With five kids, each acquiring about 25 lbs of candy each, I could swim in a pool of mass-produced sugary goodness.  But it seems to me, there are better things to do with excessive amounts of candy.   Here are 10:

So much unnecessary running for your life.

1)  Save it for the Zombie Apocalypse.  Zombies have a horrific sweet tooth.  They just don’t advertise the fact because it makes them look less terrifying.  I mean, are you really going to run from a zombie who’s munching on a Snickers?  Not so much.  So, save yourself some unnecessary exercise and save a stash of sweetness for when the zombies come to call.

Candy wreath=Zombie protection

2) Make a candy wreath for the door.  Not only is a candy wreath incredibly classy, it will also distract the zombies (see point #1) and political door-knockers (which are a close replica thereof).

It’s all about the presentation. Go ahead. Take two.

3) Keep it for next Halloween.  Like re-gifting, only sneakier, recycling old Halloween candy is a brilliant way to save yourself a few bucks during the holiday season because no one will be able to tell you were the one giving away the chalky candy.  Simply skim some candy from your kids’ stash and give it out next year.  In fact, earn yourself some good neighbor points by telling the kiddos they can take two.

Keep it up. There’s a Tootsie Roll in it for you.

4) Increase your bribing leverage.  Children will do just about anything for a mini Milky Way (at least, a fresh one).  Think of the Halloween candy as your own personal power station.  Use it to fuel those children into cleaning bedrooms and scrubbing toilets!  Entice them into cleaning out the fridge and babysitting their younger siblings!

J. Edgar has no idea what happened to the Sweet Tarts.

5) Work on your international spy skills.  In other words, master deception.  Repeat after me: “I have no idea what happened to all your Sweet Tarts.”  When you can say that without your heart racing, you can apply to the FBI.

Christmas and ghosts go together like peanut butter and jelly

6) Get a jump on Christmas.  After one Fall Festival, your kids have acquired enough candy to fill 50 Advent calendars, stuff a gazillion stockings, and turn that mediocre gingerbread house into a gingerbread mansion.  If they wonder why their gingerbread house has ghost-shaped Peeps coming out the windows, it’s time to have a family reading of A Christmas Carol.   If it’s good enough for Dickens, it’s good enough for us!

Go ahead. Eat candy. Nothing would make me happier.

7) Live the dream of meeting Jillian Michaels in person.  Simply consume all the Halloween candy you can without throwing up.  Do this for as many consecutive days as possible.  Feel free to supplement with discounted crispy rice pumpkins or  Bit ‘O Honey because no one likes those anyway.  If the children ask too many questions, see point #5.

Go ahead. Laugh at me. At least my mom isn’t raiding all my candy.

8) Feed it to the squirrels.  Squirrels are funny.  Squirrels on excessive amounts of corn syrup and artificial food coloring are even funnier.   When children see a funny, fat squirrel with a sugar high, they will not even notice the fact that you’re digging into their Halloween candy and eating all their Starburst.*

Can you feel the power?

9) Become a Domestic Diva.  Sure, you can share the kids’ Reese’s with your husband.  Or you can harness all that candy power and turn it into something like this (see drool-worthy picture above).  Do you know what this is, girls?  This is power (see point #4, only insert “husband” in place of “children”).

Zombie Bark

10) Make the candy into…more candy.  This is the epitome of excess.  When you have so much candy that you have to make it into more candy just to get rid of it, you know you have arrived.   Go ahead, zombies.  Eat your heart out (and leave mine alone).

*No squirrels were fed any candy in the making of this post.  Feeding candy to squirrels is not endorsed by the writer of this blog, even though it would be funny.  Feeding candy to squirrels may result in an increase of rodent diabetes, lead to squirrel obesity, and may increase global warming.  Feel free to feed it to your kids though.

Humor, Parenting 15 Comments

A Day Off (for real)

Writing with kids

Two of my children were in the bathtub after wetting their beds in the night, and I was on my hands and knees mopping up an impossibly sticky bowl of spilled oatmeal when the phone rang.

“The phone’s ringing!” the children shouted.

“Yes, I know!” I said from under the table.  “I can hear it!”

“Aren’t you going to answer it?” Faith asked, thrusting the phone under my nose.

“Now is not really a good time…”  I said.  Oatmeal oozed down through the leaves of the table and splattered onto the floor.

“Oh,” she said.  “I already hit ‘talk.’  Sorry.”  I could hear my mother-in-law’s voice saying, “Hello!  Hellllllo?”

“It’s Nana!” Jonathan shouted.  Kya clapped.  A call from Nana is always cause for celebration at our house.

I struggled to peel off my rubber gloves before she hung up.  “Hello?” I yelled into the receiver that Faith held up for me.

“Can I have the kids today?” my mother-in-law asked before I could explain why this was not a good time to talk.  “I was thinking you could probably use a day off.”

A day off?  I didn’t even know moms were allowed to have those.  It was dangerously close to a vacation, or a Saturday, and I hadn’t seen a real Saturday in years.  “Um, okay…” I said, hardly daring to speak in case it was all just a dream.

“Great!  And maybe we can make this a regular thing, you know, like once a week.  That way, you can count on having a day all to yourself.  Hello?  Hello?”

I had fainted right there in the middle of my sticky Pergo.

True to her word, Nana was ready and waiting when the kids and I arrived.  All five of them tumbled out of the minivan and kicked their shoes off all over her immaculate entry before running off to see if Papa’s breakfast had been better than theirs.

“Can we eat that?  Can we eat that?  Can we eat that?”  They chanted, swarming him and his plate of half-eaten pancakes.  Just back away and let them have it, I thought for his own protection.

“You sure you’re up for this?” I said to Nana, desperately hoping she wouldn’t change her mind.  It suddenly seemed kind of inhumane to leave her alone with all of them.

“Oh, no, we’ll be fine!  We’re going to bake cookies, go to the park, and maybe stop for ice cream on the way home.”  She said it like she had never taken five children out for ice cream before.  I mean, she wasn’t even a little afraid.  “Just go and have fun!”

I walked back to the minivan.  The silence was eerie.  No one asked me for anything.  No one touched anyone else or sat in anyone else’s seat.  No one pestered me to turn on the radio before I’d even started the car.  It was all so surreal.  For a minute, I just sat and stared.  But then I saw the children heading toward the front gate so I gunned it out of the driveway before they could stop me.

This is a day that should not be wasted, I reasoned.   I headed to the grocery store, then to the library to pay a small fortune for a lost copy of Frog and Toad’s Adventures, lugged the groceries into the house, did a few loads of laundry, and mopped the floor.  I mean, really.  The whole floor.

I planned to make a cup of tea and read a book that wasn’t about talking tow trucks, but the day was over.  It was time to get the kids, and I hadn’t done a single thing for myself.  In fact, I was feeling more exhausted than ever and more than a little bitter.  What had just happened?

Who needs a day off?

“Why did you go to the grocery store?” a friend scolded me when I told her how I’d spent my first day off.  “That’s not taking the day off!  That’s work.”

It certainly felt like work.  I hated the grocery store.  It reminded me that I had to make dinner.  And breakfast.  And lunch.

“You need to take care of yourself first.  What are the things you never have time to do, or can’t do because you have the kids with you?  What recharges you?”

Writing, I thought.  I never had enough time to write.  Or maybe shopping for jeans.  Six people can fit into the changing rooms at Old Navy, but it’s not pretty.

“Okay, the next time your mother-in-law takes the kids, you need to make it a priority to recharge.   Then you’ll have the energy to do all the other things that need to get done all the other days of the week.”

It sounded deliciously self-indulgent, especially for a person who thrives on quiet time.  Still, I felt a little guilty about it, especially since there was so much to do, and all of it would be easier without the kids.  I practically had to force myself to go to a coffee shop instead of the grocery store.  I ordered a latte and sat down by the window, alone.  I did not have to buy five little hot chocolates or pick up an extra-thick stack of napkins for the inevitable spills.  I just sat and worked on my computer, and no one was bored and no one was using the table for a fort.  It was nice–really, really nice.

I felt almost…adult.  A less cranky, more fulfilled adult.

The next week, I got a little braver.  I did not stop by the grocery store and wander up and down the aisles like some kind of lost soul in search of a menu plan.  I went straight home where I ignored the fact that the dishwasher needed to be loaded and the dirty laundry was threatening to avalanche down from the upstairs bathroom.

Instead, I lit candles, brought in flowers from the yard, and put on the music I used to play in college.  I let myself be quiet and played with words until one of us won.

At the end of the day, when I drove up to Nana’s bicycle-littered driveway, I had not accomplished anything that would endear me to Martha Stewart.  The dishes were still in the sink.  The fridge was mostly empty.  If my husband was a less wise man, he might have walked in the door and said, “What on earth did you do all day?”

Because what I’d done was spend all day with someone I hadn’t seen in a very long time: Me.

It turns out, it’s not one bit selfish or irresponsible, even when I spend most of the day holed up with my laptop.  In fact, when I take that time to refuel, I’m doing the very best thing I can for those I love.  And I’m finding that a refueled me is a pretty great person to have around.

Just don’t look in my sink.

How about you?   Do you take the opportunities you have to recharge, or does your to-do list consume your time off?    

 

 

Linking up here!

Parenting 23 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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