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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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On Waiting: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {19}

Duct tape slippers

My husband’s slippers are made of soft shearling.  They were a Christmas present from his mother one year.  He wears them almost always because the thermostat is set on “economy” and that is not nearly enough to take away the chill that seeps into our house with the damp from the rain.

My husband wears his slippers so much, the rubber soles have begun to crack and leave little bits around the house wherever he has walked.  “You need new slippers,” I say as I walk by with an armload of laundry.

“Mmm,” he replies, turning one over in his hand while contemplating the big gaps that have formed where the sole and the leather should meet.  He is barefoot, and I notice the strange patch of freckles around his right ankle that showed up after a childhood cast was removed.

I remember back many years ago when I ran my fingers across those spots and wondered about them.  It was the first time I had ever touched him.  My heart felt almost sick to trace out that little strip of skin where his socks didn’t quite reach the bottom of his jeans.

I still get a little woozy over his ankles.

But it’s not right to let him walk around cold-footed in January, so I think I should set about trying to find him a new pair, maybe on sale.  It’s not really the time to be spending money on shearling slippers, not while he’s still out of work and looking for a place to minster.

But I figure I can find something just to get him through for now.

A little while later, Jeff is at the kitchen table with a gaggle of kids around him.  There is duct tape and a razor blade and the sound of something dangerous going on.  I peek over their heads.  The slippers are undergoing reconstructive surgery.  The cracks in the soles are being sealed up, and the worst places taped together.

When we’re all alone, I ask him about it.  “I can find new slippers for you,” I say, and he smiles.

“I want to make a deal with you,” he says.  “I don’t think this is a good time for me to spend money on slippers, or anything else.”  He lists a few other things that he is going to do without, and even give up, for the time being.

I nod, sadly aware that we need to find a way to make our tiny budget a little tighter.  Jeff takes me by the shoulders and looks into my eyes.  “I don’t think we should spend money on slippers because I want you to spend the money on your blog.”

I am stunned, so stunned I almost don’t hear all the beautiful words my husband is saying to me, all the words about how much he has wanted this for me, how he has felt a shared agony over the fact that this gift—is it a gift?—must remain unopened while the pressing duties of life and motherhood take priority.

“It is time,” he says, “for you to write.” 

I choke back a sob that comes up out of the years of waiting, wondering, doubting.  It is a sob for a dream that has been buried so deep and for so long, I thought perhaps it was dead.  I thought perhaps it had never been real.

But it is a gift, he says, and my eyes fill up with his words.  God’s gifts and His call are irrevocable.  Time and circumstances cannot take them away.

All these years of waiting, of feeling the weight of a gift I cannot use, seem all at once not to matter.  The season of early motherhood, when I couldn’t find the balance between using my gift and loving my children, when I couldn’t keep a home and entertain a dream, was just that: a season.  Not the dead-hard season of winter but the sleepy-cold season of early spring when the ground is almost too cold to plant.

In the dark of the earth, with muddy furrows above and beside and beneath me, I mistook the season.  It was not a season for dying.  It was a season for being planted, for waiting, for growing in strength down in the dark so the gift could grow when the sun came to shine.  It was not the end of a dream.  It was the beginning.

On this beautiful day of motherhood, I am thankful that the dark years cannot diminish who God has made us to be.  I am thankful that the gifts God plants in us do not whither for the waiting.  They are simply waiting for the right time to grow.

rainy hellebore

Uncategorized 17 Comments

1K Giveaway: Day 1

This giveaway is now closed!  Thanks for participating.

 

As promised, today begins our week-long celebration here at Five in Tow.  We recently reached over 1,000 Facebook fans and I thought we’d celebrate your loyal readership by giving you lots of great stuff!   You can read the full schedule here.

Today’s giveaway prizes were donated by two of my blogging buddies from my West Coast Christian Bloggers group.  These gals are the best!

First up, enter to win this fun and fabulous e-kit from Jason and Jami Balmet! 

E-kit

Jason and Jami minister over at A Biblical Marriage.  They are a young married couple and recent parents of baby boy twins, Micah and Malachi.  You know I have a soft spot for little boy twins named Micah (okay, so Malachi is pretty cute too).  Somehow, after giving birth to these sweet boys, Jami managed to finish this e-kit, which is amazing because after my twins were born, I sometimes managed to get dressed.  Sometimes.

Jami has a heart for glorifying God in marriage and home.  It comes through in everything she writes at A Biblical Marriage and at her second blog, Young Wife’s Guide to Gospel-Centered Homemaking.

Jami-Leigh3

Meet Jami

Jason and Jami have done a great job creating clever printables for 7 romantic encounters with your spouse.  This kit is perfect for married couples of any age.  It would also make a great bridal shower or Valentine’s Day gift!  Treat yourself, and your marriage, to something better than the standard flowers and chocolates.  Treat your marriage to lasting love!

Next up…

Emily Gardner

Meet Emily

Speaking of newlyweds, our second prize comes from Emily Gardner of the blog Primitive Roads.  Emily is a California native who recently transplanted to Idaho.  Her blog is full of grace, practical (and yummy!) ideas for making a home special, and more wisdom than she should be allowed to have in her young married life.  Currently, Emily is participating in a series entitled, How to Maintain a High-Maintenance Marriage.  Wow.  She also writes over at Kindred Grace.

Emily has donated two Rachel Ray cookbooks (probably because she knows that one way to maintain a high-maintenance marriage is to cook yummy food).  This set includes Just in Time! and Express Lane Meals.

Rachel Ray

How to Enter

1) I like to keep giveaways simple.  All you have to do to be entered for this giveaway is to comment below!  That’s it!  It would be fabulous if you also subscribed to my blog, followed me on Twitter, or liked my Facebook page, but I can’t make that a requirement because of Facebook policies (and it also complicates things and that sort of defeats the whole “simple” thing).

2) Now, I know some of you are over-achievers and want to do more to increase your chances of winning.  Okay. Here you go: you  may earn extra entries by visiting and commenting on our sponsors’ blogs, Facebook, or Twitter pages.  Why not subscribe, like, or follow them while you’re there?  Come back here and leave a separate comment to let me know you went a-visiting so I can enter your name twice.

3) Share any story from Five in Tow that has impacted you.  You can even share the giveaway!  Comment below (in a separate comment from any of the above) with the title of the post you shared and you’ll earn a third entry.

4) This giveaway will remain open for three days.  I will draw two winners on January 31 at 4 pm PST and notify the winners.  Prizes will be delivered by the sponsors within 4-6 weeks.

5) Don’t forget to join us tomorrow to enter to win a $25 gift certificate from Hazelaid and Emily Cook’s book, Tend to Me: Devotions for Mothers.

Uncategorized 110 Comments

100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: Loyalty {16}

G.K. Chesterton quote

In the whole world of mothers, where each one of us is different and none of us quite knows what it’s like to be the other, I know we can agree on one thing: motherhood is hard.

It is the hardest thing I have ever done.

It is hard if you do it right.  It is harder when you’re doing it wrong.  Sometimes, it’s just hard to know the difference.

It’s hard to get up in the morning and it’s hard to go to bed at night and it’s hard to get through the afternoons when the kids are too big to take naps anymore.

It’s hard to make the tough choices like what to do about school and music and movies.  It’s hard to know what to do about work and what to do about staying home, and it’s hard to make decisions about either one without turning a judgmental eye on someone else.

Because just as soon as it’s not hard, just as soon as one of us has it all figured out, well, then things change.  Then that one can hold up a measuring stick for the rest of us to try to step up and reach.  That one can see who passes the bar and who doesn’t.  That one can walk on water.

But what if none of us can walk on water?  What if all of us are in the same boat?  What if all of us remain acutely aware that the waves are big, and if we all row together, why, we’ll all have a better chance of getting to the shore intact?

I’m a little tired of rowing by myself.  I look around and I see that you are, too.  Perhaps we can encourage each other along, for a little while.  Perhaps we can put aside our differences, our insecurities, our superficial standards, and try to see what is good in each other.  Maybe, just maybe, we can exchange a few sympathetic words because we both understand something about the other.

We both understand the fearful agony and awesome joy of raising a child for eternity.  We understand that it is hard.  The waves are high.

But at least we’re in it together.

Parenting, Uncategorized 13 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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