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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: Dreary Days {18}

Pudge Sound and Olmpic Mountains

These are the months when the sky can’t hold up the clouds, they are so heavy with rain.  Weepy and weary, those clouds hang close to the earth and close to my soul.  Even though I have no reason to be sad, I feel it when day after day the heavens can’t stop crying.

It is raining harder than ever when my neighbor calls.  Her refrigerator is feeling warm and the ice cubes are getting all melty in the freezer.  I know nothing about large appliances, or small ones, for that matter, but I tell her I’ll slosh my way over to her house so we can stare at it together.

Mrs. Smith lives all alone now.  It’s been over two years since her husband went into their bedroom to put on his shoes and never walked back out.  She calls sometimes just to tell me what she had for lunch and to ask me if I think it’s safe to eat the mayonnaise that’s been sitting in a fridge that seems to be a bit too warm.  She calls me sometimes, I think, just because she knows I was there that day.

“It’s not that old,” Mrs. Smith says while contemplating her refrigerator.  “Mel bought it back in 2005.”  But it was older than that, the service man tells her.  It’s hard to believe it could have been that long because she remembers when they bought it.  She remembers the fridge before this one and suddenly it seems like her entire life is parsed out between Whirlpools and Frigidaires.

Mrs. Smith tells me all this while I stand in her kitchen, vacuuming the coils on the back of her fridge like she’s asked.   I wish I knew what to do.  I know she wishes it too.  Instead, I relive her of her condiments—two mustards, a bottle of Worcestershire sauce and a jar of hot horseradish she bought just for her grown-up son because she remembers he likes it—and I trudge back home.

I hear Mrs. Smith’s voice calling out from behind the door.  It’s a heavy, metal screen door and I can’t see her face.  She likes it that way because it makes her feel safe when she’s home all alone at night.  “Thank you for your help!” the door speaks to me in Mrs. Smith’s voice.

I smile and nod, but I feel kind of bad because I really didn’t help at all.  So I tell her to call me later, and I know she will because it’s crying outside, and on days like this, Mrs. Smith always calls.  It wasn’t crying the day Mr. Smith died, but it’s been crying many days since.  It helps her, I think, just to know someone is close enough to listen.

When I get home, the kids swarm the box of goodies from Mrs. Smith’s and discover the cookies she tucked into the box under a jar of ham glaze.  I am fairly certain cookies won’t spoil no matter how long the fridge has been off, but that’s not why they’re there.  They’re there because it’s been raining since November and Mrs. Smith has been counting the number of days it’s been since she’s seen my kids splashing around in her backyard.

They’re there because it’s been two years since Mr. Smith died and she can’t help but find someone closer to love.  They’re there because Jeff had been gone for too many months, and Mrs. Smith understands something about that, and she feels it just about as much I do.

They’re there because it’s Mrs. Smith’s way of listening, of staring at the fridge with me even though she can’t really help.

It’s kind of the deal we have.

So on this beautiful day of motherhood, when the rain hung down and spilled over into my day, and I felt like I must have packed all my joy away with my Christmas decorations, I am thankful for the opportunity to listen even when I can’t help.  I’m thankful for friends who hear even when I haven’t spoken a word.  Most of all, I’m thankful for neighbors who let me in and keep me there just so I know someone is close enough to help.

Christmas lights closeup

Parenting 6 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

100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: Sin and Snakes {15}

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

This is not our snake.

Sin snaked its way into my home yesterday.  Slippery-bellied and silver-tongued, it took me by surprise.

I am old enough to know better than to be surprised by sin.  It is not my first time around the garden.  It is not my first time standing under a tree, looking into the beady eyes of one who wants nothing but destruction for me.  I should know better than to be surprised to find him lurking and to find myself listening.

But yesterday sin did not come for me.  Sin was after my children, and I stood shocked by the underhandedness of it all.  These are children.  What a low-down and dirty thing to do, to come slithering into the playroom while I am busy about other things.

I should not have been surprised.  I know enough to know that sin is no gentleman.  He does not care if he hurts my feelings or harms my children.

This common thief of children’s hearts was all too willing to abandon the rules of engagement to go after the innocents.  That has been his game all along.  He lures with lies and covers with shame, and it all works so well that most of the damage is done before anyone even notices.

But this time, shame did not work.  It only took one little child’s  voice to open the door to truth and it all came tumbling out, ugly-faced and squinting from spending so much time in the dark.  Sin.  From the looks of its tangled coils, it had been there for quite some time.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Micah (4)  Also, not our snake

My heart felt sick and heavy.  I did not know what to do or how to do it.  We talked about discipline, and I wondered if I had the strength to follow through with a punishment that seemed to be more a punishment for me than a penalty for them.  For a brief moment, I actually felt a little sorry for myself because I was inconvenienced by it all.  But then I recognized the hiss of an all-too-familiar foe, and I remembered.  That was just another one of his lies.

Sin is not an offense against me; sin is an offense against God.  My mother-heart aches when I see the sins of my children loud, audacious, and messy, when other people notice, when consequences are difficult to dole out and require a bit of mutual suffering on my part.

But if my heart is heavy, it should be heavy because my children have been caught playing with a snake in the garden of God.  My children have bought into the lie.  My children have offended a holy God.  My children deserve punishment.

Faith (10)

Faith (10)  DEFINITELY not our snake

But this God is a Father-God, so unlike the destroyer.  He is all of kindness, justice, and mercy.  He longs to restore what sin has taken, and so He deals with my children’s sin the way any father would.   He gives them a second chance.

Gently, God uncovers the shame.  He throws open the windows and lets in the light.  He exposes their sin and allows their father and me the opportunity to discipline them now so they are not found lacking later, when life is harder and the stakes are higher.

It is a grace that He does because it is far better to have to deal with the consequences of my children’s sin than to let the consequences of sin deal with my child.  It is far better to deal with sin in this world than in the next.

It is not as if I can make it go away simply by ignoring it.  I know my children sin.  After all, they take after me, and I am well-acquainted with the Fall.  Still, it is hard to see, so hard that I might be tempted to ignore the fact that it is a grace to see where my children fall short.  It is a grace to be allowed an opportunity to help my children recognize and repent of sin, to correct their natural tendencies and be restored again to God before further damage is done.

So on this beautiful day, I am thankful for sin brought to light.  It was not beautiful to see.  It was not lovely or good.  But also, it is not here anymore.

 

Parenting 5 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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