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Kristen Anne Glover

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{4} Obscurity

31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

Day 4 of From Enemy to Heir, a 31 Days series.  Click here to begin at Day 1.

Her name was Obscurity, although she answered to far less.

Her mother had loved her, at least for the span of time between her birth and her mother’s realization that this child was not going to fix anything.  Then, and ever after, the child knew little affection, except for the rare moments when a half-hearted apology was pasted on an abuse, and the child was left to do the forgiving while the abuser did the forgetting.

So she was forgotten.

And hungry.  She had tasted just enough of love in her early years to know that she was starving for it now, now that she had to find it on her own. 

The Enchanter knew this too because he understood the power of love, and he feared it.  The only way he knew to keep his people from traipsing right after it and into the prince’s kingdom was to give them exactly what they wanted…almost.

Almost love was the best kind of lie because it was half-true.  It took the prince’s own good thing and fermented it until it was so sweet and intoxicating, no one noticed how utterly unsatisfying it was.  This kind of love was a feast that never made you full, and the Enchanter, who could see into the hearts of men, loved to spread his hands out over the table, encouraging all to gorge themselves on the abundance.

“The prince’s love is exclusive, limited, and binding,” he would say.  “Any of you can go and eat of it, but once you do, you will never again be free.”

Obscurity

 

It was deliciously terrifying, and the Enchanter loved to run it over his lips and into the ears of his people.  “Go on,” he said if any one of them looked too long on the castle walls.  “Go on and let the prince capture and enslave you in the name of love.  Let him bend your will and break you and turn you into one of his puppets.”

Some of the people doubted the Enchanter’s words because they had heard the old rumors which claimed that the prince’s kingdom was good and fair.  But the Enchanter cinched up the snare with the best line of all.  “I’d rather live poor and die free,” he said to the dirt-covered bracken on the street, and they all nodded and stood a little taller because they had made the better choice.

They might be poor, but at least they were free. 

Or so the Enchanter would have them believe.  Just as soon as they had taken the bait, he  melted into the shadows, laughing at how easily they believed something just because he said it was so.

Obscurity grew up with those words in her ears.  What she lacked in real freedom she made up for in will, which was almost the same thing.  She held on to her heady obstinacy with a fierceness that brought quick slaps to her cheeks and sharp words to her ears.

She would not be broken.  She was not loved, so what did it matter?  What did it matter if she was beaten and trampled down?  She would be beaten and trampled down if she held her tongue, so it might as well be loosed.  She might as well flaunt what little freedom she had.

Not everyone agreed.  She was not beautiful enough to exploit or ugly enough to be feared.  Most preferred Obscurity to stay in the shadows, pushed off in the corner and dragged out only when needed, forgotten, like always.

The man who kept her was one of these, and it was he who sent her, beaten and broken, into the night.  She had used her freedom to speak her mind, and he had used his to replace her with someone more compliant.

His door slammed in her face and she was left with nothing but a day’s wages.  The last thing she saw was a look of contempt in his eyes–not sadness, not even anger.  She wasn’t worth getting angry over.  It might have been different if he had loved her.

She crawled off into the darkness.  But she had nowhere to go.  No one cared anything about her.  No one would even miss her if she didn’t turn up for days.  No one would defend her if she died from her wounds.

“That’s the trick of freedom,” Obscurity thought as she stumbled along in agony.  “It doesn’t always work out in your favor.”

She looked up, reaching for air with lungs that hurt to breathe, and saw the castle floating in the night sky like a giant cloud.  It would be the last thing she saw before she died, and she hated it with every fiber of her being.  “How dare you?” she said bitterly.  “How dare you sit up there and watch me die.”

Then she felt the darkness reaching down and pressing heavy on her eyes.  And for once, she did not have the will to resist.

*Join us tomorrow for the continuation of the story.  

From Enemy to Heir 5 Comments

Coming Out Clean

Dust rises softly as I pull books from the shelf.  It floats up with the heat from a sunbeam,and I watch it for a second, waiting.

Each book holds a memory for me, and I look at the covers and run my hands along the spines, prolonging the decision that must come. Does it stay, or does it go?  I wish I could keep them all.

There’s a box on my bed for the ones that are staying, and a box on the floor for the ones that are going.  The box on the bed is winning.

There are piles in the hall, too, where I’ve been rooting through closets and bedrooms, and stacks of our things down by the garage door, waiting to go to Goodwill.

Jonathan has taken it upon himself to sort through his treasure collection.  The trash can is full to overflowing with rocks, rusty nails, and broken bits of toys.  I notice, with a twinge of sadness and relief, that Jonathan has finally decided to throw away the shredded aluminum cans he’s been saving since last summer when he got to shoot a .22 with his dad in the field.  The bullet had gone in clean.  But it didn’t come out that way.

That’s a little how I’m feeling these days.  The bullet went in clean.  But it didn’t come out that way.

First house

A first look at our house

This house was our first house.  The housing market had just taken a huge hit, and the house was in foreclosure.  It was owned by a couple with two kids, and things had not turned out the way they had hoped.  I noticed the pencil markings on the kitchen wall and saw how their two babies had grown since they’d been here, and my heart broke for them a little bit.  The leaving couldn’t have been easy.  There was something special about this house.

It was the first house I had seen that was anywhere near adequate for a family with three young kids and two more on the way.  We couldn’t stay where we were living with five children, and we couldn’t rent for less than the cost of a mortgage, so on Valentine’s Day, after we’d worked our budget out on paper a dozen different ways, we decided to buy it.

We called the realtor, but she had news of her own.  “You won’t believe this,” she said.  “Someone else put in an offer on that house today.”

I hung up the phone and looked at Jeff, who put his arms around me and said, “It wasn’t meant to be.”

I blinked back tears.  That was my house.  Whoever was trying to buy that house did not love it the way I did.  They did not have three babies and two more on the way who needed that house.

I could not give up on it.  Secretly, I watched the house online and waited for the “Sold” sign to appear in place of “Pending.”

It never did.

A month later, after viewing a dozen inadequate homes and very nearly giving up hope that we’d be able to find a decent house in a nice neighborhood for the money we had, that classic gray house, my house, was back on the market.

We bought it.

Then, we watched God provide.

Samsung Refrigerator

Jonathan is super excited about the new fridge

The house was in need of some serious repairs and upgrades.  We found free paint at a paint recycle station, a bathtub for $10 and a pedestal sink for $25 and a chandelier for $50.  We found hardwood flooring on Craigslist and a brand-new stainless steel Samsung refrigerator for $100.  There were solid wood doors for $30 each at a local liquidation store, strapped to the top of our minivan, and a series of scavenger hunts for just enough discounted tiles for the downstairs bathroom.

There was the carpet we saved for, agonized over, and ended up getting for free when it turned out to be defective enough to void the warranty but not defective enough to replace.  We were given beds for the children, dressers that could be painted, and even a dining room table when we outgrew the one we had.

There was a brand-new lawn mower that had been returned to the store and marked down just before we came looking for one.  The yard is bursting with plant starts from my mother-in-law, spring bulbs from my neighbor, and even a free rose bush from a lady who likes to talk to the children when she walks her dog past our house each day.

And everywhere, in every part of our house, there was the handiwork of people who came and helped, just because they love us.

I see it as I’m packing up and sorting through, preparing for the move we know will come.  God is leading us on from here.  I know it, and I am grateful, but I am shredded too.  The bullet went in clean, but it did not come out that way.

In my humanity, I want to dig my roots in deeper instead of yielding to go.  I want to hold on to this house because I have seen God here.  I have been loved by God here.  There’s a part of me that hurts to prepare this home, my home, for someone else, to share my neighbors with someone else, to leave my friends and my church to someone else.

I turn in my Bible and I read of all the wanderers, all those God called out of the places that were safe and comfortable, called out of the places where God had revealed His glory, shown His hand, and showered them with provision.  There are many.  Some seem to go without a second thought.  But others ache with the going.

It is so tempting to stay.

But it is an act of faith to go, even when it hurts.

So I sort through the years of things that have filled our home and I yield to the sharpness that comes from leaving the places that have been most pleasant and I trust that even though it hurts, God’s going to make it come out clean.

*A little over a week ago, we learned of a significant turn of events in Jeff’s chaplaincy application. He missed the original deadline because of a computer error, which included all applicants with prior service.  We were told there were no options but to wait for the next review board.  However, the military granted an unprecedented extension to anyone who was affected by the computer error.  It was a complete shock to his recruiter and to us!
Jeff resubmitted his application and will be considered for active duty by the Chaplain Review Board which next meets on April 14, 2013.  If accepted, we could be reporting to a new duty station in as little as 30 days (chances are they will not keep him at Ft. Lewis, where his reserve unit is located). We are trusting that God will continue to open doors to minister to the military, as it seems this is where He wants us, and preparing for the move so we’re ready when called.

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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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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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