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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Palm Sunday and Swords

Palm Sunday

 

The palm branches were late that morning.  My friend, a tall brunette who drives a delivery car to church and pours her creativity into the flowers at her shop, rushed into church just as the announcements were ending.

I thought about the palm branches the night before.  We even talked about it, as a family, but then Sunday had come and in the rush of looking holy enough for church, I had forgotten all about them.

I had forgotten we were waiting for something. 

But the children hadn’t forgotten.  They rushed upstairs after Sunday school anxious to grab a palm branch.  That was their favorite part about Palm Sunday, and expectations ran high.  But the palms weren’t there.

They looked up at me with disappointment in their eyes.  “I don’t know,” I said, answering the question they didn’t ask.  “Maybe we were wrong about the palms.”

Maybe we were wrong.  Maybe we had been expecting something that was never going to come.

Then the door at the back of the church opened, and Oriana came in, a few bouncing chestnut curls framing her smiling face, and the children gasped.

The thing they had waited for, the thing they had hoped for, had arrived.

And it was all Hosanna! and waving hands and laughter.  Hosanna!  Hosanna!

But it didn’t take long for the praises to fade.  Wiggling children turned palm branches into spears and swords and it was all poking eyes and whacking heads and more than one attempt by a particular redhead to impale an unsuspecting elder with a palm frond.

Palm Fronds

I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.

Is this what I was waiting for?  More chaos?

I saw a crowd of Jewish mothers, skirts full of children, pregnant with expectation.  The very thing they had waited for had arrived!  Hosanna!  Hosanna!

But the children were poking the donkey and whipping their sisters and all those Jewish mothers shot withering glances at their husbands because those boys certainly didn’t learn that kind of behavior from them. 

It didn’t take very long for that long-awaited gift to lose its newness.  It didn’t take very long for that good thing to turn sour.  All the expectation in the world couldn’t keep the hosannas coming. 

At the end of the day, there was nothing but the same dusty road, littered with broken branches because all those Jewish mothers had had enough of palm swords and had said things like, “If you don’t put that thing down right now…”

It didn’t take very long for the long-awaited Messiah to fall short.  Because the Messiah they wanted couldn’t work out the worst in them.  The Messiah they wanted couldn’t change a lick of their life.

Only a Savior could do that.  But a savior was not what they were waiting for and certainly not what they expected.

So they missed it.

And they had to wait for their eyes to be opened and their hearts to be softened to this Messiah, the one who came late to the party with nothing they thought they needed, the Messiah who couldn’t hold their attention long enough to be late for dinner.

This Messiah–the Messiah–was more than just the main event at a ramshackle parade.  He was more than an excuse to wave branches and cause a little trouble, more than just the fulfillment of a dream, more than just a novelty, more than just a one-time Hosanna. 

He is everything worth waiting for.

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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

Let it Be

Let it Be

It was a little too dangerous to be out on the roads that had just claimed the life of a young father.  Great, treacherous flakes floated down from the clouds that hid the heavens.  But that didn’t stop them from coming.

Beautiful saints, every one, they came to give a soft place for the tears to fall, to embrace the broken, and to mourn with those who mourned the most.

Bonnie, who had been widowed younger than my mother—was my mother a widow?—was one of the first to come.  She came in, soggy from the snow, and grabbed my mother’s hands without stopping to take off her coat.  Her tear-stained eyes searched my mother’s face for the pain she knew was there and the pain she knew was coming.

They sat together in the steel light of the feather-frosted window, and Bonnie sobbed.  She sobbed for her dead young husband and she sobbed for my tall, handsome father, and she sobbed for my mother because Bonnie knew.

She sobbed because there was nothing else she could do.

There was nothing else anyone could do, and so, like Bonnie, they came in, silent as snow.  Dear friends from church, relatives, even neighbors–everyone came.  Some came for a minute, heaving a potted plant into my arms or pressing a fold of money into my hand for my mother before they flurried away so as not to be a bother.

Others stayed until the shadows grew and melted into the freshly-fallen snow.  They did not know how to leave a woman who had just been left all alone in the world with three young children and a house that needed fixing.  So they lingered.

They lingered until the little green house in the middle of the forest was filled up with the scent of the saints.  Even with the drafty windows and a wood stove that wasn’t quite up to the task, there was a warmth in that place unlike anything I had known before.  It was warm enough to calm the shivers that convulsed through my body, warm enough to stop my teeth from chattering, warm enough to help me believe that somehow, it would be okay.

I watched from the corner of the couch, from my little refuge behind the tall-backed adults and the nodding heads and the sad voices, and I saw Him.  Jesus.  Jesus in real hands and real feet and real tears crying over our Lazarus- grave when it was too late and there was nothing else that could be done.

How beautiful He is.

I rested my head on a couch cushion.  It smelled like my Sunday school teacher, who didn’t have any children but who loved children more than most women who did.  She had been there with me, and her fragrance lingered and filled up my space like a slow, parting embrace.

The entire house smelled like Jesus, in the remarkable way that Jesus smells like Dial soap and Old Spice and a kitchen full of casseroles.

Had He been there that day?    

In my mind, I went over all the faces.  Some old, some young, some full of their own agonies and some who were just learning how hope could be shattered.  Each with a story, but each willing to step in to the day when my story fell apart.  Just like Jesus.

It left me breathless.

Somehow, Jesus had come to my living room garden, and He had whispered to me, “Child, child.  Why do you weep?”

He said it in words that came through other lips, chosen messengers, but it was there all the same.  I clung to them as the bitter sleep drifted in and I thought to myself, if this is what it takes to see Jesus, then let it be.

I think of it, all these years later because we are in a hard bit of the road, right here.  I have told you about it, dear saints, and you have come in with arms that ache to hold me up and tell me it will be okay.  Some of you have cried with me because you know.  You have called and you have written and you have prayed for me even when you do not know me, not really.

You have been Jesus to me.

And I weep because it is so beautiful, I do not know that I could ever trade these moments even for all the answers I ever wanted that did not come.  I am surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, and it is you, dear friends, who cheer me on.  It is you, dear ones, who minister Christ to me in real hands and real feet and real tears that cry over my Lazarus-grave.

You have shown me Jesus.  I cannot wish for any other.

I am left with nothing more to say in my prayers but this: If this is what it takes to see Jesus, then let it be.

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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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