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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Ordinary Days

I got married in my home church in Wisconsin on a day in January when the sky was blue and biting.  The lake was frozen solid and dotted with shanties the sturgeon fishermen had hauled out and stocked with beer as soon as the ice was thick enough to hold a pickup truck.

I stood at the back of the church in a dress that could have been warmer with my brothers on either side.  They were both as tall as my dad, or taller, and looked so much like him, it made my grandmother catch her breath because when she saw them, she could almost swear she was looking into the face of the son she lost so many years before.

It should have been my dad on my arm that day. 

But it wasn’t.

I had my brothers instead, and it was fitting and right because we had been down so many other roads together.  I wanted them there beside me the way I wanted them beside me when my father slipped into eternity without saying goodbye.  We stood together when we looked into his coffin and we stood together then, stepping awkwardly down a too-narrow aisle in time to the music.  On that bitter cold day in January, they gave me away in place of my dad to a man my father would never meet.

It was hard not to feel the loss.  There’s something about a bride walking down an aisle without her daddy that makes people blink fast and swallow hard.

Ordinary Days

My dad with my older brother and me on just another ordinary day.

 

Dads should be there on days like that, on the red-letter days when the calendar screams of life-changing events like high school graduations and college commencements and birthdays and marriages and babies and the news of twins growing inside.

My dad missed every single one of those. 

And I miss him on those days.

But I also miss him on the brown-paper bag days, the ordinary days filled with a million insignificant events like scraped knees and bedtimes and cold cereal mornings.

Dads should be there on days like that.

Because life is short.  I learned that fast and young when a snowy winter road took my dad before I even had a chance to say good-bye.  I watched him go, that morning, you know?  I watched him go and I didn’t say good-bye because I thought he’d be back.

Ordinary days

I missed him hard, at first, like some piece of me had been cut out and replaced with cold air that kind of numbed but mostly burned.  I missed him every day and in so many different ways, I didn’t think I’d ever stop grieving because I kept finding new ways to do it.

Many years later, when I looked back on a grief-journey that spans more years than my father ever lived, I realized I have learned something along the way.  It is something so important, I wish I could grab you around the shoulders, dads, and make you hear it.

Someday, you’re going to slip right out of your body and your kid is going to be left grappling with the loss.  It’s kind of strange how one soul can be free and another weighed down by the same event.  You will be gone, and they will be here, remembering.

Do you know what they’re going to miss the most?

I do.

I want to tell it to you because it’s important, and I’m a kid who lost a dad so you need to hear it because one day it might be your kid who’s learned it, and by then it will be too late.

More than anything, they’re going to miss the ordinary days.

They’re going to miss those brown-paper bag days, the days that drone on and on and you kind wish you could fast forward because they’re all so much the same.  They’re going to miss the days you thought didn’t matter.

Turns out, those are the days that matter the most.

You know those soccer tournaments you manage to make it to?  Those are important.  So are the graduations and the weddings and everything in between.

But they are not the most important thing.

What is most important is all the countless minutes filled with nothing much but you and them and the span of time between waking and sleeping when you say and do the mundane things that make them feel loved and important and a part of you.

Anybody can show up at a wedding.

But your daughter is going to remember how you talked to her at breakfast.

Anybody can cheer at a playoff game.

But your son is going to remember what you did when you came home from work.

Anybody can drive the family to church on Sunday.

But your kid is going to remember what you said when he messed up, whether or not you showed up, and if you lived up to all you said you believed.

Your daughter will think of you on Christmas, it’s true,  but she will miss you most on some Monday morning when the sky is perfect for flying and the smell of an engine makes her think of all the hours she spent in the hangar, watching you work.  She will think of you when a wood stove crackles and someone makes popcorn late at night.  It will be stale jelly beans and Risk games and badly-sung hymns and mustached smiles and grey-blue eyes that search out the hurt and motorcycle roars and coffee first thing in the morning that will make her wish she could bring you back, just for a second.

Ordinary days

It’s easy to think it’s enough to be there for the big stuff.  But I’m here to tell, dads, it’s not the big stuff she’ll remember, and it’s not the big stuff she’ll miss.

It’s the ordinary stuff, the stuff you never thought twice about because it was just life.

Hear me, dads–that’s the part of your life that is everything to her.

I know.

I think of it today because it’s Father’s Day, one of those red-letter days when dads get new ties and handmade paperweights and everyone is together because they’re supposed to be, and it’s good.

But tomorrow is Monday.  There’s Wheat Chex for breakfast and groggy kids to get up and a long day before you come home again.  It’s tempting to slide a bit because there’s a good show on TV and you’re tired and after all, you just made a memory on Sunday, if you believe holidays make the best memories.

I’m telling you, they don’t.

Give your kids Monday.  Give them Tuesday too.  Give them all the ordinary minutes you can, dads.  Because one day, you’ll be gone, and those are exactly the minutes they’ll miss the most.

They will miss your ordinary.  

Give it to them.

Ordinary days

My dad enjoying an ordinary day with my younger brother

Parenting, Uncategorized 25 Comments

Here

clothesline

The clouds were horses, kicking up their great feathery tails across the blue sky.  I watched those skipping mares as I hung the laundry on the line.  Change is coming, they seemed to say.  Change is coming.

I felt it.

The sky was warm and comfortable like blue jeans, faded around the edges, and the grass stuck to my feet in little bits because the lawn mower had beaten me to the backyard.  All around was the scent of the wash, fresh and clean, and the song of the robin in the trees.

It was hard to believe that tomorrow, it would rain.  Tomorrow, things would change.

I looked out at the horizon and thought about all the things I needed to do before it rained.  The laundry was only half done.  The yard was full of rakes and shovels and the pile of mulch was not much smaller than when I started that day.  There was trim to be painted and a shrub to be trimmed and…

…and suddenly, I was so caught up in the change to come that I was no longer here.  I was out on the horizon, where the storm clouds mount and gather their arms.  I was so far ahead, wrapped up in the change to come, that I could not appreciate the blessing and goodness of this.

This.

Here.

Now.

Change is coming, but it is not here yet.  Here is where the blessing is that God has for this day.  Here is where my home is, for a little while longer, and here is where my children sleep and my husband smiles and my neighbors call.  Here is where God has put me.

Even though I know I am moving on, I am not there yet.  I am here.  But my temptation is to look so far ahead that I forget that my feet are not where my eyes are.  I am not there yet.

I think to myself that this is why God leads me step by step.  He knows that if He gave me a larger vision, I would look so far ahead, I would miss everything in between.

He wants me here.

So I dusted off the mixer that has been decluttered to some remote corner of my kitchen cupboards and made cookies when I should have been painting, and I called the kids around to have one when the chocolate chips were still gooey and warm.

“Mom made cookies?”  They were incredulous, because Mom has been so far over there that she has completely forgotten about things like homemade cookies and afternoon tea.

Who has the time to make cookies when they’ve got a house to sell?

Not me.  Not unless I remember that I’m still here, and sometimes, kids need a mom who makes cookies when she should be painting.

I found a bit of myself in that plate of cookies, and I reeled her back in.  This is still where I belong, I thought to myself.  Here.

Every few years from now until my husband retires from the chaplaincy, we will move.  We will get orders for some new location and suddenly, our home will start to slip away to make way for a new one.  The temptation for me will be to slip away with it, to close out chapters before they are complete simply because I know the title of the next one.

I should know better. The best parts of chapters often come at the end, and I don’t want to miss a word.

I don’t want to miss a cookie break with my kids, or a conversation with a dear friend on my faded green couch in the middle of a living room full of chaos.  I don’t want to miss the lilacs that bloom in my front yard, or the opportunity to bring them in in great big bunches that fill up my home with spring.  I don’t want to miss a quiet evening on the deck with my husband, when the sky becomes a canvas and the colors spill out over the water.

Sunset over Puget Sound

By evening, the laundry was in off the line and the clouds had covered up the sun.  My tea flushed and steamed in the rush of cool air, and high in the evergreens, the robin sang his evening song to me.

Things are about to change, he said to me.

I knew it.

But for now, I am here.

Uncategorized 13 Comments

Moving to Ft. Bliss

Ft. Bliss, Texas

Who’s up for a road trip?

We got the news on Saturday.  For over three weeks, we have been waiting to hear where Jeff’s first duty assignment as an active duty chaplain will be.  It was a good sort of waiting, like waiting for Christmas, because every place was exciting and new.

But still, three weeks is a long time to wait to see what is under the tree.

The kids and I looked at maps of all the Army installations around the world and dreamed about the possibilities.  We could be moved right down the road to Ft. Lewis, which would make it easier to say good-bye to Nana and Papa, or we could be sent across the ocean to new adventures in Japan or Germany.

“I just hope it’s not Texas,” Jeff would say when the topic came up.  He had been stationed in San Antonio in his Air Force days, back when he was young and single and almost as incredibly handsome as he is now.   If I had known him then, I would have snatched him right up.

But I wasn’t there because I didn’t know him then.

Because of that, and a few other reasons, San Antonio was miserable.  San Antonio was the reason he got out after three years instead of four.  San Antonio was the reason Texas did not make the list when Jeff’s recruiter asked him where he’d like to be stationed.

So when I got home on Saturday from a day out with Faith and Jeff met us in the driveway with a big grin and the news, “Well, I heard where we’re going!”  I did not expect him to say El Paso, Texas.

El Paso, Texas? 

I choked on a laugh and repeated the words because I thought he was joking.

“Are you serious?  Texas?”

“I would not make that up,” he said.  “We’re headed to Ft. Bliss in El Paso, Texas.”

“Ft. Bliss?”  The name made me explode, it seemed so funny to me.  Ft. Bliss.  God has a sense of humor.

Jeff was smiling too so I grabbed him around the neck and kissed him because it was so wonderful to know.  Texas!  Suddenly it didn’t matter that San Antonio was not his favorite place on earth.  This was not San Antonio. This was Ft. Bliss!

Joy rushed in with the knowing, and we both felt the thrill of knowing where the next two years were going to find us.

“We’re going to Texas!  We’re going to Texas!” the kids whooped and hollered in the driveway.

All except for Kya, who burst into tears and ran into the house.

But we could not stop laughing.  God was not going to let us off the hook with this whole faith thing, not now, not ever. 

“Where is El Paso?”  Jonathan said, wrinkling up his nose like the word tasted funny in his mouth.

“Let’s find out!” I said, and we all ran for the classroom atlas that we keep stowed away in the school cupboard.  We flipped open the pages to the state that will be our new home in just a few weeks, and found El Paso.  There it was, right in the foothills, within spitting distance of Mexico, with miles and miles of desert all around.

I looked out at my lush green yard and the beautiful view of the ocean and the snowy mountains and I laughed again.  I was going to need to buy more sunscreen.

But what an adventure!

“We’re going to learn Spanish,” I told the kids, “and go to Mexico!  Just wait until you see it!”

It’s been nearly twenty years since I lived in Mexico, but it has not been so long that I have forgotten what it was like to walk through the shanty towns, what it was like to drive by the street kids, dressed in rags and high on paint thinner.  It has not been so long that I have forgotten the warmth of the people and the richness of the culture.  It has not been so long that I have forgotten how much I loved it.

I was going to get to take my kids to Mexico! 

The kids were thrilled about the Mexico part.  Not so much the Spanish.  Spanish sounds a little bit like school, and that was an unfortunate reminder that schoolbooks are packable.

“What’s it like in El Paso?” Faith asked.

“Well, there are lots of rocks, and swimming pools, tons of tarantulas and scorpions…”  I paused for a second and wondered if it was a good idea to embellish the amount of venomous creatures in and around El Paso.  I wasn’t exactly sure there were tons of them, and I could just imagine God giving me a house infested with them just because I promised it to the kids.

So, that would be great.

“Will I be able to catch lizards?”  Jonathan asked.   He was practically foaming at the mouth.   Arachnids the size of dinner plates and scaly things that bite are his favorite.

“Probably.”

“What kind?”

Jeeze.  “Well…”

“Does everyone have a swimming pool?” Kya asked, saving me from having to recall anything beyond an armadillo, which isn’t even a lizard, but I couldn’t think of iguana for the life of me and I suddenly felt insecure about whether or not Gila monsters lived in Texas.  I should have paid more attention when Planet Earth was on.

“Will we have a pool?” Kya pressed her hand on my arm, tears still glittering in her eyes, and looked at me intently.  This could be the deciding factor on whether or not she moved to Texas with us or packed up her princess paraphernalia and moved in with Nana for the next two years.

“Oh, Kya, of course…”

Jeff looked at me and shook his head.  The thought of pool maintenance weighed heavier on his heart than her puppy eyes.  The man is made of steel.

“…of course…I don’t know yet,” I said slowly.  “We’ll see.”

Jeff looked at me again, only this time his face was very clearly communicating something like, “There is no way on earth we are getting a house with a pool,” but he said, “I saw a picture of the one on post, and it looks pretty great.  It has a water slide and everything.”

Nice save.

Her eyes grew wide.

“Awesome!”  Jonathan yelled.  

The living room erupted into shouts and cheers and various forms of interpretive dance.  Kya threw her arms around me.  This is going to be okay.

And of course, it really is going to be okay.  I looked at my children and I thought about all the places Jeff and I have lived, both before we were married and after.  Our lives have taken us all over the world, and while we both have lived in places we did not love, we have yet to find a place on this earth where God’s mercies do not reach.  All of those experiences have shaped us into the people we are today.

I can’t wait for my kids to have some of those adventures.

So.  We are going to El Paso, and it’s going to be great!

 

Uncategorized 44 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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