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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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First Love and Little Boys

Gifts from kids

*100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: 32

My son’s blue eyes are shining.  “I have a present for you, Mommy,” he tells me.  A smile that holds a secret spreads across his face.

“Really?”

“Uh-huh.  It’s for Christmas.  When is Christmas?”

“Oh, Christmas is a long time away.”

“Like a year?”

“Yes, almost a year.”

He looks a little crestfallen.   I can tell he’ s doing the math in his head and realizing that a year is about 23% of his total existence, and that’s a long time to wait.  “Well…” he considers.  “I wanted it to be for Christmas, but…here.”

He shoves his little hand toward me and uncurls five stubby fingers.  “Treasures!” he announces and pours into my hand a bead, a BB, one found Lego piece, and a red bit of a Christmas decoration.  “I been findin’ them for you,” my baby says with all the sheepishness of a schoolboy.

“Oh, Micah.  I love them!  Thank you.”

He points to the sparkly bead and shrugs, “That a diamond.”

“You know I love diamonds,” I say, fingering the bright pink jewel.

His blue eyes dance and he nods because he can’t think of what to say.  Instead, he throws his arms around me legs and hugs me tight.

I hug him back and kiss him too.  I just want to keep him there for a minute and savor the joy of being my little boy’s first love.  Someday, he will forget all about pink diamonds and pretty buttons.  But I won’t.

I take his treasures up to my room and put them on my dresser.  I’m not sure what to do with them, but I can’t quite throw them away.  I remember back to when my biggest little boy was Micah’s age.

At four, it was Jonathan’s singular purpose to find the prettiest rocks on the planet for me.  Multiple times a day, he’d charge through the front door, recklessly kicking his boots off as he exclaimed, “Mom!  Mom!  I found a ‘pecial rock!  It’s for you, Mom!”

I had to pause whatever I was doing to wash the rock and look at it under the water.  I had to notice how pretty the sparkles were or how particular was its rock-ness.  As sweet as it was, I sometimes wished there wasn’t so much gravel around the house.

Soon, I had so many rocks on my counters, I didn’t know what to do with them.  I piled them around my house plants and the bird bath and eventually paved a pathway from the driveway through the blueberry bushes with special rocks.  Sometimes, when he wasn’t looking, I’d toss the rocks back into the gravel and hope Jonathan wouldn’t notice.

Some days, Jonathan found other recipients for his rocks.  Our tattooed next-door neighbor with the leather pants, dog collar choker and kind blue eyes was one of his favorites.  As soon as Jonathan heard the beat of the bass and the belch of the Harley as it swooped up into our cul-de-sac, he got ready.  “Mr. Tom!  Hi!  Mr. Tom!  I have a ‘pecial rock for you, Mr. Tom!”

Sometimes I’d peek out the window at little brown-haired Jonathan, beaming up at burly Mr. Tom, who bent down and smiled back, ruffed some hair and shared a little common appreciation for God’s creation.

gifts from kids

One day, after Mr. Tom had already received his daily rock, Jonathan’s screams erupted through the  neighborhood.   In a second, Mr. Tom was leaping over his fence and our retaining wall because he knew the little boy who loved him had been hurt.  He had seen the discarded board and the rusty nail that had gone right through Jonathan’s tender foot.

Jonathan cried out and looked up into Mr. Tom’s face.  “You’re okay, Buddy.  I gotcha.  It’s okay.  You know I’m a doctor, right?”  It was a little joke because Tom wasn’t a doctor at all.  But you couldn’t tell Jonathan that.

Gently, he lifted my son into the car and sent me off to the emergency room without even letting me think or worry or be shocked at the sight of my child with a board nailed to his body.

A few days later, when Jonathan was up and around again, I headed up to Tom and Sandy’s green steps with a plate of cookies and a thank you.  But I was stopped short by a neat pile of special rocks on the deck.  Tom had saved every one.

One day, I noticed Jonathan had stopped bringing me special rocks.  It’s not that he loves me any less, but he is older now, old enough to know that treasures go in shoe boxes and sock drawers.  Treasures are for keeping.

But Micah doesn’t know that yet.  He is young still, young enough to know that gifts are for giving, and the best gifts are for the one he loves most in all the world. The best gifts are for his mommy.

Unabashedly, he lavishes me with diamonds until I think I must be the richest woman in the world.

“When I get big, can I marry you?” he asks me.

“Nope, you can’t marry me, Micah,” I say as gently as possible.

“Oh.  Is it because I’m too little?”

“No, it’s because Daddy would be jealous.”

Micah nods.  He sees how that could be a problem.

“Well, then, when I grow up, will I still be your Micah?”

“Always.”

“Okay,” he shrugs again.  “And, I will live right here with you.”  Micah presses a glass marble into my hand and snuggles into my side.  “’Cause I love you da best.”

It is a moment I want to hold on to, like a first kiss.

Someday, he might forget that I was his first love.

But I won’t.

Micah

Micah, 4

Parenting, Uncategorized 12 Comments

You Can’t: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {30}

Sad redhead boy

You can’t have it all.

You can’t get ahead.

You can’t even keep up.  There is no keeping up.

You can’t keep from looking your age without an increasing amount of help.

You can’t compare yourself to anyone else, including the you you thought you’d be or the you you were twenty pounds and ten years ago or the you you pretend to be but really aren’t.

You can’t always use you strengths.

You can’t always shed your weaknesses.

You can’t figure it all out.

You can’t have all the answers.

You can’t control the things you most want to control.

You can’t keep your kids from making mistakes.

You can’t keep your kids from making bad mistakes.

You can’t always be the mom you want to be…and you can’t give up on trying.

You can’t expect your husband to feel the same way about you now as he did when he first met you.  You’ve birthed babies and wrestled with years.  Let him love you more and differently now.  You are more and different now.

You can’t stay the same.  Who would want to stay the same?

You can’t please everyone.

You can’t even please yourself.

You can’t prevent failure.

You can’t prevent fear.

You can’t prevent I’m sorry and forgive me.

You can’t prevent people from refusing those words.

You can’t prevent struggling with them yourself.

You can’t love people enough.

You can’t love God enough.

You can’t even be enough.

And you can’t imagine how much God loves you anyway. 

What can’t you do today? 

Uncategorized 4 Comments

Dear Martha: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {29}

Martha Stewart Living

Dear Martha,

Thank you for your generous magazine subscription offer.  “Free” is one of my favorite words these days, and I’m a huge fan.  Really.  I have a stack of your past work and I look at it sometimes when I need to know how to choose a ripe kumquat or draw a mural on my staircase.

Unfortunately, I will have to decline your offer.  While it’s wonderful to know that macramé is not a lost art and someone besides my uncle has a swizzle stick collection, I find your magazine does not have what I need.

I do not need to know how to raise prize-winning ducks or how to care for mohair.  I do not need to know how to identify marks on silver (we’re pretty much a Rubbermaid and Pyrex kind of family) and I certainly do not need to know how to indulge myself with a perfect manicure, even though you would be appalled at the state of my cuticles.

What I need is to know how to be satisfied with what I have.

I need to know how to give my attention fully to my children.

I need to know how to get juice out of carpet.  Maybe you covered that one.

Don’t get me wrong.  I love what you do.  In fact, that’s the problem.  I love the excellence with which you pursue your craft and the beauty you dangle before my eyes, so much so that I could easily lose myself in it.  I could bow down to your hospital corners and perfectly organized sock drawers.  I could pursue that kind of excellence without a backward glance.

You see, Martha, all that beauty demands a response, and I have a hard time responding rightly.  I see what you have and I want it.  It’s a little escape, a little dream, a little distance from my reality, which is a lot messier than yours.  You probably don’t have sippy cups fall on you when you open your cupboard doors, but I do.  You probably don’t have mismatched quilts on the kids’ beds, but I do.  You probably don’t even know what a mess Silly Putty can make on couch cushions, but I do.

And it’s taken me longer than I care to admit to be okay with that.  It’s taken  me longer than I care to admit to realize that my kids do not need they kind of mom who buys in to what you offer.  They do not need a mantel full of hand-flocked Easter bunnies or made-from-scratch Twinkies.  They need me.  They need me present, undistracted, and humble enough to not chase after every “good thing” that graces your glossy pages.

There will be a time, I’m sure, when the grandkids come to visit and I will awe them with gingerbread cathedrals and homemade snow globes.  But these kids, my kids, don’t need more picture-perfect magical moments that come at the cost of a too-stressed mom who loves perfection more than reality.

They need this mom, their mom, to spend more time pleasing them than you.  They need this mom, their mom, to be in this thing 100%.  And that’s not something you can help me with.

So, with all due respect, I think your free magazine is still a little too rich for my blood.  It’s just not worth the cost.

Yours affectionately,
Kristen

Humor, Parenting, Uncategorized 28 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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