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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Rainbow Brite and My Selfish Heart

Rainbow brite

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When I was a girl, a little brown-haired friend invited me to her birthday party.  I got a real Rainbow Brite invitation in the mail with my name written on the envelope in purple pen.  It was so official.  A real invitation meant there might be store-bought cake smothered in unholy amounts of store-bought frosting.  A real invitation meant there might be party games with real prizes and goodie bags filled with stickers and candies.  My brothers seethed with envy.

The week before the party, Mom drove me to the mall so I could forage through KB Toys to find a gift for Jenny.  The boys scampered off to ogle over Micro Machines and He-Man figurines while Mom ran across to Hobby Lobby because she thought yarn was more interesting than Barbie.  As if.

I was left alone in the aisle of Strawberry Shortcake dolls and Pound Puppies and an overwhelming amount of sparkly things.  “Just pick out something you would like,” my mom had suggested the night before.

“But make sure it’s under ten dollars,” Dad added.  He did not understand that I could not buy a Cabbage Patch Doll for under ten dollars.  “It’s just a birthday party.”

Just a birthday party.  Clearly, he did not know that the invitation had real glitter.  This couldn’t be just any gift.  It had to be perfect.

But standing in the toy store, surrounded by dazzling displays of perfectly packaged toys in every shade of pink and purple imaginable, I had no trouble picking out a toy that I would like.  I just couldn’t find one I wanted to give.

Suddenly I saw the perfect toy.  It was a My Little Pony Sticker Factory.  It came with rolls of blank stickers and scented stamps and glitter pens so some lucky girl could make her own one-of-a-kind pony decals.  Plus, as a special bonus, the package included 15 limited-edition Puffy Pony stickers.  Be still my heart.

It was the only package left.  I grabbed it off the shelf and waited for my mom to come back and pay.  My hands shook.  I had found the perfect gift.

“How fun!” my mom said when she saw it.  My brothers rolled their eyes.

She wrapped the present for me on the day of the party because she knew how to make the corners just perfect and I didn’t.  It was the most beautiful present I had ever seen.  I held it on my lap on the way to the party and thought about my own sticker collection, which I had carefully arranged in an old photo album.

I had been saving stickers for my whole life, or least since the first grade, when my teacher put a sticker on my paper that smelled just like a dill pickle.  But I only had three puffy stickers, and one of them wasn’t even sticky anymore.  Now Jenny was going to have more than a dozen limited-edition pony stickers.  My heart hurt.

The closer we got to Jenny’s house, the worse I felt.  I loved stickers more than anything else in the whole world.  Once, I thought I’d lost my album.  I almost died.  Now, I was about to give away the very last My Little Pony Sticker Factory to little brown-haired Jenny, and she was going to be the only girl on the entire planet who could make stickers that smelled like cotton candy.

Then I had an idea.  I opened my backpack and slid the present in.  When my mom pulled up to Jenny’s house, I scampered out and waved good-bye before she could remind me to be good.

Jenny’s house was full of streamers and balloons.  Her parents had set up the basement with Pogo balls and roller skates and even a set of stilts.  There was a giant Rainbow Brite piñata and Rainbow Brite napkins and Rainbow Brite plates .  And there was a plastic Rainbow Brite tablecloth decorating a table full of presents.

Everyone else had dropped their gifts on the table.   There were dozens of them.  My plan could not have worked out more perfectly.  Jenny would never even notice that my gift was not in the pile.

Jenny’s parents led the games and passed out the cake (store-bought, as I had hoped).  Then it was time for the presents.  “Why don’t each of you girls go and get your gift from the table,” Jenny’s dad said.

Wait…what?

“That way, Jenny can thank each one of you and I can write down what you brought,” her mom said as if this was not the worst idea ever.

All the other girls scampered off to the table.  I followed along and hoped no one would notice that I did not have a gift.  But I was not so lucky.

“Kristie?  Can’t you find your present?” Jenny’s mom said in front of everyone.  “Girls, did anyone grab Kristie’s present by mistake?”  All the girls looked at their presents and shook their heads.

“Maybe it fell under the table,” Jenny’s dad said.  He got down on his hands and knees before I could say anything.  “Don’t see it!” came his muffled voice.

That’s because Jenny’s present is in my backpack, I thought.  I could have said it, right then, and everything would be okay.  Everyone would think I had just forgotten to put it on the table.  I could have said it, but I didn’t.  Instead,  I looked at Jenny’s mom and lied.  “I must have left it in the car,” I said.

“Oh, that’s alright,” she said.  “Those things happen!”

Jenny opened the rest of her presents and soon it was time for my mom to come again.  I grabbed my backpack and tried to keep the present from crinkling inside.

Later that night, I carefully unwrapped the My Little Pony Sticker Factory from its beautiful wrapping paper with the perfect edges.   I crumpled up the paper and hid it in the very back of my closet until I could sneak downstairs and hide it in the trash where no one would find it.

Then I crawled under my blanket and opened the package.  It smelled like cotton-candy,  just like the package promised.  The limited-edition stickers were indeed puffy.  They were brilliantly colored and shiny with newness.

But I couldn’t put them in my sticker album.  My mom might see the, or my brothers, and everyone knew brothers couldn’t be trusted.  I couldn’t even stamp my own My Little Pony sticker because I would have to hide that too.

Worse still, I felt sick.  My heart didn’t hurt, but my stomach did.  I looked at the present, Jenny’s present, and I realized it didn’t seem so wonderful anymore.  I had envied my friend’s gift.  I had resented her because she was going to get the very thing I wanted the most in the world.  Then, I had betrayed her.  I had taken her good gift and tried to keep it for myself.

For weeks after the party, I worried.  I worried that Jenny would remember she never opened my gift.  I worried that her mom might ask my mom about it.  I worried that I smelled like cotton candy and puffy stickers.

Days and weeks went by.  The gift was forgotten.  But not by me.  I would think of this gift for years to come because it revealed a weakness in my heart that could not be attributed to normal childhood selfishness.

Far into my adulthood, I would find it difficult to rejoice when the gifts I desired where given to others.  Just this past week, a friend of mine was given the very thing I have desired.  If I could pick out any blessing for myself, I would have picked the blessing God gave to her.  But God did not give it to me, and I felt a pain in my heart like I felt years before, when I had to attend a Rainbow Brite birthday party with a gift I wanted to keep for myself.  It was back, the same ugliness I had let rule in me as a kid.

It took me a whole day to be truly happy for my friend without any thought to my own lack.  It took me a whole day to get over my self-pity.  As I struggled with my own selfishness, I felt just as ashamed, just as greedy, as I did when my hands held a stolen gift.

But I am not a child, and my Father does not have limited gifts to give.  He is able to give abundantly the very things I’d like to take for myself, if I could.  My childish heart might tend toward tantrums, but I have learned enough to know that a gift freely given is much better than a gift selfishly taken or enviously desired.  It might not be my turn now, but I don’t have to worry.  My Daddy has enough puffy pony stickers to go around.

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Like Bread on the Water

Bread on the water

I hold in my hands a loaf of bread, still warm from the morning baking.  Simple and earthy, it is food for the day.  Fragrant, it is hope that I have enough.

I have come to the edge of the sea.  The water is calm with the morning, misty-eyed and heavy with the waking.  It reaches out over my toes, and pulls the covers back.

Something in the air makes me think the weather will not hold, and it makes me restless with the unknowing.  But I have this bread, and that is more than I can say for the gulls who circle overhead.  They have nothing for the stormy days.

Yet, they fly.  High up into the clouds where I must squint to see them, they touch the hands I cannot reach.   They are free to follow the fisherman’s wake, where even in the storms, they can glean all they want from his nets.

But this bread in my hands keeps me tied to the earth.  I am not free as long as I am holding on to something.

At least I have something.

No, it is more than something.  It is everything.  Everything that makes me feel safe, safely separated from uncertainty, safely veiled from eternity, safely immovable.   The wind can carry the birds wherever it wants.  But it cannot carry me.

Yet, they fly.  I can’t help but wonder at the magnificence of it.  Higher and higher, they rise on wind I cannot see and they cannot control.  They do not fear—they soar.  But I am left here, stodgy and rooted, crushing my vulgar grip into this one thing I can’t release, the one thing that keeps me pathetic and small in the midst of glory.

I wonder where the wind would take me, if I let it.  As soon as I wonder, I know.

With shaking hands, I rip at the crust, releasing a little steam into the chill of the air.  Wholesome crumbs drop down into the sand and melt into the sea.   My hands are full of bread as the waves roll in.  I cast the bread out to meet them—all of it.  I hold nothing back.

But wait!  No!  My very breath escapes me.  I collapse into the sand.  Foolishness.  Stupidity.  Madness!  There it is on the water, my one thing, my very life, now bobbing, now sinking–wasted.

I look up to the sky desperate to rise but more bound by the earth than ever before.  I have given it all!  For what?  For what!

There is nothing left.  I am empty.  I am alone.  Even the gulls have left for deeper ocean as the clouds mount over the water.  The wind rises, blowing sand into my eyes without lifting me higher.  It is stronger than I remember it being, and it pushes me out into the water, deeper and deeper.  The water swirls and foams with the storm, and I cannot fight it.  I sink down into the waves, flailing, desperate.  I look up at the glassy water that keeps me trapped and I see it, the shadow of bread on the water.

The waves are full of it, cast off bread, given in hope, returned in abundance, more bread than I can see.

I fight to the surface, and open my eyes before I even gasp for breath.  It is all there, and more.  “I do not understand,” I say to the no one and everyone as I reach out to touch that which was not wasted at all.  “I do not understand.”

In all my lifetime, I will not be able to gather it all.  I cannot hold it all.  I cannot lose it, or even give it all away.  But there is no need.  It is all around me, this bread on the water.

The wind pushes the waves to the shore, carrying me to back to the very place where I started.  But I am not the same.  I have felt the crushing power of the wind and the waves, yet I stand as one redeemed, bought back, renewed.

My hands are empty, but I feel no fear.  I feel no need to grasp on to something, anything.  Everything I ever had has been given back in ridiculous abundance, but I am not tied to it.  I am no longer immoveable.  Like bread on the water, I am free.

Cast your bread upon the waters, and in the day of trouble, it will come back to you.  Ecclesiastes 11:1

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Don’t Rush the Season

Beauty in the season

It is October, which means my son has been working on his Christmas list for a few weeks already.  He began the rough draft on April 12, when the buzz from the birthday cake wore off and he realized he still didn’t own a BB gun or a boa constrictor.

“Jonathan,” I said to him when he presented me with his working list, “it’s only October.  There are pumpkins and leaf piles to enjoy, and you’re thinking about Christmas!  Don’t rush the season.”

But at eight years old, it’s hard to be happy with pumpkins when Christmas is just around the corner.   In fact, it’s hard to be eight when it would be much neater to be ten.  It’s hard to be content with riding bikes and shooting Nerf guns when it would be so much more awesome to drive a car and shoot a rifle.

It is in our nature to be discontent with where we are, and ever to wander ahead of where we should be.  In our striving to be somewhere we are not, we trade the beauty of the moment for a restless kind of rushing toward a place that may very well come, soon enough.

I have made the same mistake in my journey as a mother, more times than I care to admit.  It seemed I was always pressing hard toward the next stage.  I longed for my newborn to sleep through the night, for my six-month-old to sit up on her own, for my one-year-old to feed himself.  I longed for my husband to have a stable job and or our income to be sufficient for our needs.  I longed for a home I could call mine, and for the freedom that came with having older children.

I wish someone had told me, Don’t rush the season.

Maybe then I wouldn’t have struggled to potty-train a child who seemed to be ready, but wasn’t.  I would not have attempted to take newborn twins on a family vacation.  I would not have missed the blessings in the lean times or refused to grow in the places where God had so obviously placed me.  I would not have been jealous of a season that had not yet come.

Everything is beautiful in its time

Every season has a beauty and a difficulty all its own.  It is not always easy to walk through a valley of longing or grief.  Most of us do not relish the uncertain times when jobs are lost or children are ill.  We might struggle against the endless afternoons when our children are small and not easily occupied and it seems like we are wasting ourselves on the mundane tasks of changing diapers and sweeping up Cheerios.

But even the difficult seasons serve a purpose.  When my husband and I were in seminary, we were dead broke.  It was Christmas, and the only presents I could afford were those from a little shop on campus where students could give away unwanted items for other students to take.  I had found some free toys and books for our daughter and wrapped them up.  Even though she was not old enough to care, it grieved my heart that I could not give her a real gift.  I worried about how we were going to pay our rent and felt guilty every time I bought groceries.

One day, when I was feeling particularly pouty because I had to take an extra cleaning job in order to make ends meet, we came home to find an envelope stuffed under our apartment door.  It contained $200 in cash.  Tears of gratitude and shame filled my eyes.  I knew this was a season of growth, but I had been too busy complaining to be concerned about growth.  I had been too busy longing for what we did not yet have to realize that we had something now that we would never have again.

At no other season in my life could $200 mean so much to me.  At no other season in my life could I learn humility and gratitude from having to give used gifts as presents.   At no other season in my life could I have nothing and everything all at once.

If I had gotten my way, I would have missed it.  If I had gotten my way, I would have pushed passed the struggle in my desire to get to the easier years to come.  That envelope was like the voice of God shouting at me, Don’t rush the season.

A time for every purpose under heaven

Our family has come to another season of uncertainty.  We do not know where the path will lead.  After December 15th, when my husband’s military orders end, we will be without full-time employment.  It is scary, to be sure, but I have found a certain rest and contentment in this period of waiting and trusting.  I am not always patient.  Sometimes, I worry and long for answers.

But by God’s grace, I have also been able to see the beauty in this season.  This is the hard place that lets us see the hand of God.  This is the place where doors open, not because I pushed, but because He turned the handle.  When it is over, I will be thankful.  But for now, I am appreciating the purpose and significance  of this time.

This time, I am not rushing the season.

 

“There is an appointed time for everything. And there is a time for every event under heaven—

A time to give birth and a time to die;

A time to plant and a time to uproot what is planted.

A time to kill and a time to heal;

A time to tear down and a time to build up.

A time to weep and a time to laugh;

A time to mourn and a time to dance.

A time to throw stones and a time to gather stones;

A time to embrace and a time to shun embracing.

A time to search and a time to give up as lost;

A time to keep and a time to throw away.

A time to tear apart and a time to sew together;

A time to be silent and a time to speak.

A time to love and a time to hate;

A time for war and a time for peace…He has made everything appropriate in its time.”  Ecclesiastes 3:1-8, 11a

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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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