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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Better With You Here

Kristen Glover

The plan for the day improved greatly with one phone call Jeff made this morning.  He needed to pick up some building materials from a friend, a friend who happens to have three giant trampolines lined up in a row in his backyard.  The first one is directly under his roof.

You have no idea how fun it is to have three trampolines lined up in a row just inches from the corner of a roof unless you’ve tried it, or unless you’re under the age of ten and can imagine it.

“I’ll tell ya what,” Gary said when Jeff asked if he could drop by.  “You can come on over as long as you bring the family and stay for some lemonade.”

It was settled.

The only trouble was, I’ve been fighting some fierce kid-germs, and they’re still “winning me.”  I thought about this as Jeff announced the plan to the kids.

“Yahoo!” they screamed.  “We can jump on the trampolines!”

“I don’t think I’ll be able to go,” I said through my stuffy nose.  “I’ll probably have to stay home.”

“Even better!” one of the children shouted gleefully.

The words sliced through the air and made a direct hit.

Even better.

Even better if you don’t come.

Even better without you.

It was said carelessly because even very small children can toss heavy words about as if they weigh nothing at all, as if they mean nothing at all.

But they meant something to me, and I felt myself bleeding out right there in the middle of the kitchen because those words cut deep.

Those words were not the words of my child; they are the words of my Enemy.

They are dark words, and deep like the depths of the ocean.  When all the house is asleep and the moon brings in a tide of self-doubt, I feel myself getting sucked into the currents and drowning into that ocean.  It tells me that I am not enough, that I have messed it up, that I am not cut out for this.  It gurgles up in me and I hear the rush of it in my ears: they all would be better off without me. 

My child does not know that I have heard these words before, and often, in my own heart and my own mind.  He does not know how they leave me clinging to the rocks and chanting to myself, “It is not true.  It is not true.”

This child does not know how it cuts me to hear in broad daylight the words I fight in the dark. 

Those words hang in the air between us and for an awful moment, I am swept out to sea by a sudden wave and I cannot breathe.  It is true.  All my failings, all my shortcomings, all my inadequacies: every single one of them is true.  They would all be better off with someone else.

But wait…

They are not true, and they are not the words of my child.  They are the words of my Enemy.  I come up for air, grab hold of a bit of craggy rock, and see it for what it is.  How dare my Enemy use my child’s lips to utter his lies!  How dare he tread on that holy ground.

Because this calling is not my own.  I did not bear these children out of my own desire, nor was I given them out of my own goodness or ability.  A thousand women with empty arms deserved this more.  I know it.  I think of Mother’s Day, looming large on my calendar, and I weep for them because I feel so undeserving of the gift they desire.  Why me?  Why not them?

It is a whirlpool that easily sucks me in.  I can drown in my inadequacies and I can grieve the probability that another mother could do it better, but it doesn’t erase the fact that God gave me a name I did not earn.

He called me mother. 

It is a grace-calling.  And grace-callings are the hardest ones to answer, I find, because they never-ever-never-ever fit right.

Because if it fit right, it wouldn’t be grace. 

If it fit right, it wouldn’t leave me stumbling and tripping over my own mantle like some kind of misfit, or wrestling with doubts and uncertainties like a kid who can’t figure out how to put on her own dress.

If it fit right, I wouldn’t have to trust that God knew best, despite how I perform…

…despite what my kids think of me…

…despite the fact that I am impatient…

…and also selfish.

Despite the fact that I can’t get my arms in my own sleeves–despite all of it.

I was not called to be a mother because I was going to be good at it.

I was called to be a mother because God could make something good out of it, despite me.

I am wet and dripping, half-drowned and inglorious, yet God bends to whisper in my ear,

“It’s better with you here.”

I struggle to believe it.

It is better with you here because I AM the One who called you.

That is the truth I need to hear, and often, a truth that speaks in a whisper but shouts above the waves.

It is better with you here. 

 

100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: 41

100 Days of Motherhood, Uncategorized 39 Comments

I’m for Childhood

Skinned Knees

I’m for skinned knees,

Grass stains,

Sweaty foreheads,

And Band-Aids.

Sweaty boy

I’m for ice cream drips,

And soggy cones,

For Popsicle stains,

And Icees.

Icees

I’m for campfires,

Sooty hotdogs,

Lightning bugs,

And stars.Campfire

I’m for blanket forts,

Bedtime stories,

And flashlights.

I’m for sleeping close.

Sleeping Close

I’m for swings under trees,

Daisy chains,

And dandelion fluff.

I’m for touching the sky.

Blowing Dandelions

I’m for wide fields,

Deep woods,

And All Things Scary.

I’m for adventure.

Brave of all scary

I’m for Good Guys,

For super-hero capes,

Stick-swords,

And muscles.

Muscle man

I’m for King of the Mountain,

Tag,

And Hide-n-Seek.

I’m for playing.

Hide 'n Seek

I’m for road trips,

And “You’re-on-my-side,”

And “He’s-looking-at-me,”

And “If I have to pull over…”

Road Trip

I’m for bicycles,

Going too fast,

And Down-Hill.

I’m for brakes.

Bikes

I’m for climbing trees,

Apple picking,

And leaf piles.

I’m for pumpkins.

Pumpkin picking

I’m for Grandma’s house,

Sleepovers,

And extra dessert.

I’m for being spoiled.

Spoiled

I’m for stuffed animals,

the Tooth Fairy,

Christmas stockings,

And wishes.

Wishes

I’m for first snowfalls,

Soggy mittens,

And cocoa.

I’m for marshmallows.

Cocoa and Marshmallows

I’m for freckles,

Sticky kisses,

And dimpled hands.

I’m for “I love you.”

I love you

I’m for rainbows,

Twirling umbrellas,

And puddles.

I’m for mud pies.

Muddy Boots

I’m for stomping.

I’m for skipping,

And running,

And flying.

Summersaults

I’m for imagination,

For new crayons,

Fresh paper,

And possibilities.

Crafting

Crafting

I’m for discovery,

For turning over rocks,

Taking a leap,

Being brave.

Brave

I’m for newborn noises,

Kid conversations,

And questions.

I’m for naps.

Jonathan sleeping

I’m for growing.

I’m for new clothes,

Birthdays,

And missing teeth.

Happy Birthday

I’m for time—

For eternal days,

And days that go too quickly.

I’m for childhood.

Faith

100 Days of Motherhood, 40

100 Days of Motherhood, Parenting 8 Comments

The Final Disney Reveal

Ring Pops

Ring Pops–just another way to kick off a great adventure!

I almost didn’t dare to show my punk-face at church today after leaving the Disney series without a promised resolution.  God-fearing Christians can forgive a lot of things, but you’d better not start a story about your kids and not finish it or there might be words.

Sure enough, I stepped in the door with my Bible in my hand and was accosted with mean words like, “So, when are you going to post the rest of the story?”

I see how it is.  It’s all love, joy, and peace until your blog post is late by a day or three.

But I have to take responsibility for causing people to stumble because I did promise to tell–no, show–what happened when my kids finally figured out where their amazing surprise was going to take them.  I was going to post a video so you could see their delighted faces for yourselves.

The only trouble was, I had no idea how to do that. The video I took was too long so I couldn’t use it without editing it down.  Not only that, but it turns out I have am a terrible cinematographer.  Probably I didn’t need to take so many shots of the tops of my children’s heads or the ceiling of the fifth floor of the Sea-Tac parking garage.

Also, I sound funny on film.

Worse than that, I’m totally inept when it comes to technology.  I don’t even have a cell phone, and I’ve never sent a text message in my life.  I’m pretty sure that means I’m Amish.

So, I promised a video grand-finale to my series but had absolutely no way of making good on that promise.  I was banking on the fact that my husband, who sports a really cool prepaid cell phone from Walmart and just yesterday received a text message from a very nice company offering him a great price on auto insurance, could figure it out.

I was wrong.

For some reason, his video editing software did not like my shots of the Sea-Tac parking garage ceiling any more than I did, and it refused to work with that kind of lame material.  He spent a good chunk of time on Friday trying to help me out, but it could not be done.

Meanwhile, the three older kids came bursting home a little after midnight, all sun-kissed from spending four days in a state that exports all their cloud cover to Washington.  They were all “Disney-this” and “Disney-that” and “Why can’t we watch Aladdin?”

Because we’re Amish, that’s why.

Saturday was a work day at our house, but in between refinishing my cabinets and hearing all about the princesses that infest the Happiest Place on Earth, I managed to do something amazingly techie.  See, there’s this new thing called YouTube.  I  hear it’s all the rage with kids these days.  You can upload and edit your own home videos for all the world to see.  And that is exactly what I did.

I was able to upload my video on YouTube, even though it took nearly two hours to do it and I was half afraid something would go wrong and I’d have to start all over.  But it worked!  I even managed to edit it down just a bit so it’s not eternally long and you don’t have to listen to my funny voice until you start to wonder how Jeff puts up with it.

The end result was this, a video of the final moments of the mystery adventure.  As I told you in the last post, I had created gift bags for the kids that I had planned to have them open on the plane.  But because they still hadn’t figured out where they were going even after we pulled into the airport and I gave them Mickey shirts to wear, I had to give them the gift bags in the hopes that the final clues would help them make the connection between all these clues and Disneyland!

You can see all the things that were in the bag here.

Meanwhile, the kids started unpacking their gift bags.  Somewhere between the Buzz Lightyear puzzle and the autograph books, it started to sink in.

This is what happened:

 

Parenting, Uncategorized 21 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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