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Kristen Anne Glover

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30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Weakness {Day 16}

Looking for Day 1? Find it here.

It all started because the kids wanted flashlights so they could read in bed.  I was hesitant at first.  Sure, flashlights are fun and reading is commendable, but I balked at the idea of giving my kids anything that required batteries.  I knew what would happen.  They would forget to turn the lights off before falling asleep and the batteries would be dead by morning.  I imagined ourselves going through dozens of coppertops in the first week alone.

Then I found a solution: hand-crank flashlights.  It was a brilliant concept.  The batteries were kid-powered.  All the kid had to do was use some of his boundless energy to turn a handle on the flashlight and the light would come on.  No batteries required!

We added them to the kids’ Christmas lists.

On Christmas morning, both Faith and Jonathan received flashlights.  But someone had read the memo wrong because Faith’s flashlight did not have a crank.  It was solar-powered.

A solar flashlight?  Hadn’t we heard jokes about solar flashlights?  I took it out of the package and placed it in the dim light of a cloudy windowsill to charge.  I didn’t expect much.  There is no sun in Seattle.  There’s just high cloud cover.  It would be a miracle if the thing charged.  I hoped she wouldn’t be too disappointed.

That night, we could hear Jonathan frantically winding his flashlight.  When he pushed a button, a soft light came out.  It was nice.  But it didn’t last very long because he was too little to turn the handle fast enough or long enough to power up the battery.  Pretty soon, he was trotting upstairs to ask for help.  Daddy gave it a whirl.  So did I.  We wound that thing until our arms hurt.  The light was brilliant then, but it lasted less than half-an-hour before it slowly dimmed to nothing.

Faith took her flashlight off the windowsill, pushed the button, and BAM!  Her room was filled with a radiant light that lasted far into the night.  I couldn’t believe it!  She snuggled into bed, happy as could be.  Hours later, when I went in to check on her, the flashlight was still shining strong beside her while she slept.

We discovered that even on the cloudy days, the brightness of the sun was able to permeate the atmosphere and charge that little flashlight.  On the sunny days, the battery got super-charged and lasted for days.  All Faith had to do was remember to put her flashlight on her windowsill and every night, she had light.

No matter how hard Jonathan cranked his flashlight, he simply could not compete with Faith.  He gave it a valiant effort but eventually, the crank broke off.  The flashlight couldn’t be charged without the crank, so we had to throw it away.

The weakness of Faith’s flashlight was that it was completely dependent on the sun to operate.  The weakness of Jonathan’s was that it was completely dependent on human strength to operate.  At first, we thought Faith’s flashlight was the weaker of the two, but its dependency on the sun turned out to be its greatest strength.  The other’s dependency on human power ended up being its greatest downfall.

As mothers, we are like lights in our home.  Our ministry is that of shining the light of the gospel so those around us can see the face of Christ.  The question is, which kind of light are we?

Too often, I am like the hand-powered flashlight.  I get up in the morning and I do my best to power through my day because I somehow think that my dim little light can offer something to the sun.  I think it is more commendable if I can do it myself. 

I go about my day, whirling away at that incompetent handle trying to get enough energy to do the dishes and the laundry.  Heaven help me if someone needs extra help with math because I’ll have to crank a little longer to get through that.  I know I should be brighter and my light should shine farther, especially on the days when my kids are sick or things don’t go well, so I crank all the harder.  But all I get is exhaustion.  Life as a crank flashlight is not enjoyable.

It is also not a picture of the gospel.  That kind of light is not the light of Christ.  It is the light of Kristen, and it is dim by comparison.   It is a gospel of works, which is no gospel at all.  When I behave that way, I am showing my children that when life gets hard or overwhelming, the thing to do is to power through on your own strength, to strive for perfectionism whatever the cost, and to “Keep calm and carry on!”

Even if you have to ditch the calm part, at least carry on.

What a different thing it is when I am more like the solar flashlight, when the kids come down and find me reading my Bible even though there’s a pile of dishes in the sink and I haven’t gotten out of my sweats.  What a difference it would be if, instead of powering through a math lesson, I said, “You know what?  I’m getting frustrated.  Let me take a few minutes to pray.”  What if, when I am sad or overwhelmed, I don’t plaster a fake smile on my face but I let my kids see that the thing to do in situations like that is to tap into the power I have available to me in Christ.

What a beautiful, powerful light that would be!  They would see that their mother is nothing but an empty vessel, filled up with Christ.  I am like a solar flashlight.  I have no power on my own.  I have no light apart from the Son.

That is what my children need to see and hear from me because that is truth.  If I try to minister to them out of strength, I am selling them the lie of self-sufficiency.  The truth of the matter is that my children do not need to see that I can get it all done and keep it all together.  What my children need to see more than anything is that I can’t.  And neither can they.

Weakness is going to be their lot in life, just as much as it is mine.   Not one of my children will ever reach perfection.  Ever!  The best they can hope for is to be somewhat successful.  But even if they are successful by the world’s standards, their lives will be marked with failure.  Clay is weak, and we are clay.  They will be discouraged, overwhelmed, frustrated, defeated, and a myriad of other things that can’t be powered through by human strength.

When I depend on Christ, my kids get to see the solution to all the weaknesses they’ll have to face in their lives.  They will be witness to the fact that the only source of strength is Christ alone.  In that truth, I can rest and enjoy my children, confident of the fact that the very smallest amount of Christ’s work on my behalf is worth far more than I could ever do on my own.  If I have done nothing more than been a weak vessel for His glorious light to shine through, I have done enough.  May we all choose to be that kind of vessel today.

Please join us tomorrow for Day 17: Strength

For further thought

1) Read 2 Corinthians 4:5-7.  Are you preaching yourself to your children, or Christ?

2) Based on the passage above, why is it so important to embrace weakness?  What can we show in our weakness that is impossible to show in our strength?

3) Be intentional about sharing your weaknesses with your children today, but only if you are committed to allowing Christ to fill up what is lacking in you.  Take the time to pray when frustrated, read the Bible when you are tired, or praise when you feel afflicted.  Let your children see how powerful weakness can be!

Parenting 16 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Tattling {Day 14}

Welcome to our series! Find Day 1 here.

I don’t remember the events of the day.  They were so insignificant in and of themselves.  But after a whole day of minor catastrophes, broken rules and bad behaviors, I had reached my limit.  Frustration bubbled right under the surface.  By 4:30, when I heard my husband pull in the driveway, I was ready to pop.  He opened the door, smiled, and said, “Hey, how was your day?”

It was the wrong thing to say.

The very sight of his face was like an open invitation to release all the negative emotions I’d been harboring all day.  In capital letter phrases, I spewed frustration and irritation all over him.  There was The Incident at the Grocery Store Which Will NEVER Happen Again and the Diaper Malfunction of Epic Proportion and the Tantrum Heard ‘Round the World.  There were No Naps and Potty Training Mishaps and Biting.

Yes, Biting.  I paused for a moment so my husband could feel appropriately sorry for me.  Also, he needed to hang up his coat.

While I waited, I thought of a few other things I had failed to mention.  The very thought of those injustices caused my heart to beat faster.  The imprint of anger lingered though the offenses should have been forgotten.

“Maybe we should talk about this later,” my husband said.  He didn’t sound at all sorry for me.  Exasperated, I turned around.  There behind me, listening with eyes wide, were my three oldest children.  They had been there the whole time.  They were standing right there when I recounted their sins to their daddy, listening to me tattling about their bad behavior and our awful day, listening while I vomited grievances I said I’d forgiven.

No one had to tell me I was wrong.  I knew it the minute I saw them.  I knew it too late.

Parenting can be downright frustrating.  But that gives me no right to air my frustrations to anyone who will listen.  It does not give me the right to hold on to anger until my husband gets home and I have a chance to “vent.”  It does not give me the right to keep a record of wrongs and apply forgiveness retroactively after I’ve had a chance to update my Facebook status with my current hardships.

Love requires me to treat my kids with more respect that.

“Love keeps no record of wrongs.”  How I struggle with that some days!  If I don’t keep a record of wrongs, I can’t exact the sympathy I want from my husband who gets to work with adults all day.  I can’t earn a friend’s pity, and no one is going to tell me I deserve to indulge myself in a bubble bath unless they know how hard I have it.

“Love believes the best.”  It also shows the best.  It seeks to build up, not tear down.  The things I say about my children or post on Facebook should always be the best things there are to say.  In our culture, it only takes a second to post a reproachful comment about your child for hundreds of people to see.  It only takes a second to send a tattling text or dial up a friend on the phone so you can vent about the kids you have buckled up in the back seat while you cruise down the carpool lane.

Social media and cell phones were not invented so we can tattle on our kids.  It is the equivalent of reciting all their wrongs while they stand there listening just so we can gain some sympathy for ourselves.  It is an unequal exchange, and the child always loses.

It all comes down to this: there is never a parenting concern so important it requires me to address it publicly unless I am trying to decide whether or not to take one of them to the ER.  Love airs praises in public and addresses concerns in private.  Love does not tattle. 

Someday, my children will be old enough to read my Facebook history.  I want them to feel loved by what they read, not betrayed.  Right now, they are old enough to hear what I say about them to Daddy, Nana, and the moms I meet for play dates.  Right now, they are listening.  What they hear me say about them will tell them whether I am a follower of Christ or a fraud.

What they hear will tell them if I believe what I say or not.  If I say I know love but sacrifice their reputations for the temporary consolation of a friend, I do not know love.  I say I know forgiveness, but if I harbor far lesser offenses than have been forgiven of me, then I do not know forgiveness at all.

Here I am, a harlot with a wandering heart.  Yet I have been bought by the blood of Christ, washed, forgiven, and redeemed.  God has every right to boast of His goodness in contrast to my darkness.  He has every right to list my offenses in the heavens for all to see.  But He does not.  He stands before the world and calls me His Bride.  His Chosen One.  His Beloved.  His Child.

My Father delights in me.  I think part of that delight comes from the fact that He does not simply forgive my sins; He forgets them.  He enjoys me because He chooses to let go of the things that divide us.   It is a kind of love that does not tattle.  It does not traipse my bad stuff out in public for all the world to see.  It does not even rehash it in the living room or at the dinner table.  Love allows forgiveness to be the end of the story.

When I tattle on my children and air their offenses in public, I do not feel better.  I taste the bitterness of anger.  I rekindle my desire for retribution and at least a full pound of flesh.  I feel slighted because their little “I’m sorry” is incapable of recognizing how much I’ve been wronged.  I cannot delight in my children when I continually cut into the same wound.

Enjoying my children requires me to demonstrate the kind of love and forgiveness I have been shown.  If I say I know love, it must be my Father’s kind of love.  If I say I know forgiveness, it must be His kind of forgiveness.  That is the stuff that binds my heart to theirs and allows me to enjoy them as part of this beautiful redemption.

That is the kind of stuff that is worthy of a Facebook status update.

Love keeps no record of wrongs.

Please join us tomorrow for Day 15: Fear

For further thought

1) In 1 Thessalonians 5:11, Paul encourages us to build each other up.  Listen to the words you say to and about your children today.  Are they edifying?  Do they build up or tear down?

2) May our prayer today echo King David’s in Psalm 19:14: “May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart [and the things I post on Facebook] be pleasing in your sight, O Lord, my rock and my Redeemer.”  Pray that simple line whenever you feel tempted to tattle on your children today.

3) Activity: Make it your objective to remember the best and funniest things your kids do all day.  Write them down (see my Quote Wall for an example), post them on Facebook, and share them with your spouse over the dinner table instead of all the bad things.  How does this change your heart for your children?  Do you find yourself enjoying them more?

Parenting 20 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Affirmation {Day 13}

New here? Click here to start at the beginning of the series.

 

If you missed Friday’s post, you may want to start here with our conversation on looking for the good.

 

Nicolas was a first-grader with a rap sheet.  His teacher, who had insisted on giving me the inside track on her problem student, told me he was stubborn, defiant, reclusive, impulsive, dangerous, and uncontrollable.  His Asperger’s often manifested in aggressive behavior that resulted in calls to the principal.  I was told to leave my door open whenever Nicolas was in my room.

Nicolas did not like me.  That’s what he told me every time I came to get him for our tutoring sessions.   He did not like coming to my classroom.  He said I was stupid.  He did not like to sit in his chair so I let him stand beside it, but I wouldn’t let him stand on it, and he didn’t like that either.

“You’re really good at standing,” I observed one day.

Nicolas frowned at me.

“You’re probably the best stander in the entire first grade.”

“No I’m not,” Nicolas retorted and sat down.

The next time I saw Nicolas, he sat right down in his chair and did not tell me he hated me first.  He was hiding something in his lap.

“What did you bring, Nicolas?” I asked.

“Nothing.”

“Okay,” I shrugged and pretended to be busy getting our math game ready.

Slowly, Nicolas unfolded his fingers and smoothed a crumpled paper.  It was a drawing of a Lego pirate ship, full of sails and rigging and pirates peeking out behind cannons.  Nicolas had tried to draw every single brick.

No one had told me Nicolas could draw.

“Yes, but the problem is, he wants to draw before he finishes copying his sentences,” his teacher said when I asked her about it.  “He never follows directions.”

Oh.

“Nicolas,” I said when I saw him next, “I didn’t know you could draw.”

Nicolas shrugged and kicked his feet against the table leg.  Thump…thump…thump…It drove me nuts.

“I need some pictures for my wall,” I continued.  “Do you think you could make some for me?”

“Do I have to write about them?” he asked.

“Nope.  Not here.  I just like your pictures.”

Nicolas stared at me while he thumped.  Suddenly, he exclaimed, “You have green eyes!”

Talk to Nicolas was like talking in circles, I thought.  But I smiled instead.

“I didn’t know you had green eyes.”  He said it like it changed something between us.

The next week, Nicolas brought me a paper.  “Here,” he said, dropping it on the table like it didn’t matter to him at all.  It was a portrait.  Nicolas had drawn my eyes first, I could tell.  He had even made the orange rays coming out from the centers that you can’t even see unless the light is just right.  Nicolas had noticed.

He sat down.

“It’s very good,” I said.  “You are very good.”

“It’s just a stupid drawing.”

“No, it’s not a stupid drawing.  Drawing is not stupid.  It’s a very special thing you can do.  Not everybody can do that.  Most people can’t do that.”

Nicolas shrugged.  But the corners of his lip betrayed something of a smile.

Nicolas came to my class twice a week.  After that, he almost always brought pictures.  Sometimes, he remembered he hated me.  Sometimes, he remembered I have green eyes.  But every time he came to my class, I tried to find something special about Nicolas.  Something that was his.  Something that the quirks of his brain and his personality could not take away.

He did not make it easy for me, especially on the days when Nicolas screamed at me and tore his “stupid pictures” off the walls because he thought I’d moved them, or threw the math cards at me or banged his head on the table until I was afraid he’d get a concussion.

I didn’t always feel like trying so hard.  Sometimes, I didn’t think he deserved it, quite honestly, because the bad outweighed the good so heavily.  I wanted to hold on to any sort of praise I found because it seemed like affirming the good also affirmed the bad, or made the bad less grievous.

I had to remind myself that every good and perfect gift is from above, even little gifts, like a day with Nicolas in which he didn’t call me names. Every good thing of God deserves to be praised, even if it comes wrapped in six years of blond-haired and blue-eyed brokenness.  The good is worth noticing even when it comes with a whole lot of bad.

An unexpected thing began to happen.  The more I began to speak words of affirmation to Nicolas, the more I began to enjoy him.  The more I began to enjoy him, the more I began to truly love him.  I began to see in Nicolas the same things that were in me: stubbornness, fear, and the need to control my environment.  But I also saw creativity, intuition, and sensitivity.  The deep things of Nicolas called to the deep things in me, and I realized we had a lot more in common than I first thought.

The same thing happens when I affirm my children.

We hear a lot about how children need affirmation, and it is true.  But it is also true that giving them affirmation meets a need in me.  I need to hear my mouth speak what God is doing in the silence.  I need to bring it to light, call it to my attention, to notice.   When I notice what God is doing in my children, and speak it to them, it is powerful, like praise.  My heart is drawn to the beauty I have discovered in them, the way my hands are drawn to sea-washed pebbles along the shore.  I delight in them.  I rejoice in their growth!  I enjoy discovering new good things of God in them.

Some of the sweetest times we have had as a family have come from the very simple act of speaking affirmations to each other.  We explain to the children that the Holy Spirit causes good things to grow, things like love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness, and self-control.  Anytime we see those things in each other, it means the Holy Spirit is doing a good thing, and we need to affirm it!  We speak it to each other.  “Kya, you were so kind to your brothers today when they wanted you to read them a story.  Faith, you showed a lot of self-control when Jonathan barged into your room without knocking.”

Do you see God working in your children? 

Tell them.

Maybe you have to look very, very hard or start with something very, very small, like noticing how well they can stand beside a table.  Speak that one thing.  Speak it, and listen to the words your lips utter.  Be encouraged by the good thing you found—however small—and trust God to make more good things to grow.  You will find that as you affirm your children, you affirm your love for them as well.  You remind yourself how much you enjoy them, even on the days when it is hard.  The affirmations you speak create an expectation of goodness in your home.  Who wouldn’t enjoy living in a place like that?

When I began to affirm Nicolas, his heart, which had a hard time feeling emotions, began to beat a little more warmly.  He found out I was expecting a baby, and came by my room every day to check to see how the baby was growing.  I put a little chart on my door just for him, with a little weighted baby so he could feel how big the baby was getting.  He was convinced I was going to have a boy and made frequent spontaneous visits to my classroom to offer a name suggestion or to bring me a picture for the nursery.

Then one day, Nicolas came with deep bruises around his neck.  “My dad tried to kill me,” he said flatly.

Nicolas’s dad was a retired cop.  He married late in life, and when he found out he was having a son at fifty, he couldn’t have been any prouder.  Except that Nicolas was not the kind of son he had expected.  Waif-like Nicolas with the blond hair and too-big eyes would not play ball or wrestle or even hug.

Earlier that week, Nicolas had refused to get out of bed.  Once he was out of bed, he refused to get dressed.  Once his dad wrestled him into his school clothes, Nicolas threw himself on the floor and screamed because the seams in his socks rubbed his toes wrong.  He screamed so loud, he woke up his baby sister, who started screaming too.  He called his dad bad names in his loudest voice and kicked him in the leg until his dad tried to strangle him while his mom called 9-1-1.

When his mom came to my class to explain that Nicolas would be moving to a new school, she saw the baby chart on the door.  She had heard Nicolas talking about Mrs. Glover’s baby “boy” and was surprised to find that I was barely showing.  He loved that baby because it was safer than loving me.

She also saw the pictures all over my wall.  Nicolas’s mom did not know he could draw.  But there in my room was something beautiful about her boy that she had missed.  She had missed it because life with Nicolas was hard.  It took everything she had and more just to get through the day.

“Nicolas has a talent,” I said, and she began to cry.  No one had ever seen anything praiseworthy in her boy before.  How she had longed to see something—anything—in him to give her hope.   That very large woman gave me a very big hug and left in tears.

I never saw Nicolas again.  But there is a little piece of my heart that is connected to a little piece of his because the good things of God bound us together.  The simple act of affirming the good in Nicolas made the good more evident to me, to the point that his irritable or aggressive behaviors didn’t matter as much.  Affirming him did something I never expected: it made me enjoy him more. 

God causes the good things to GROW!
1 Corinthians 3:6-7

Please join us tomorrow for Day 14: Tattling

For further thought:

1) Think about your child(ren).  What makes it difficult to affirm him or her?

2) Write each of your children’s names on a piece of paper.  List as many godly traits you can think of.  Add to the list throughout the day as others come to mind.  Do you feel how your heart changes toward each child as you begin to focus on the good things?  Now, speak those things to your child, either with the family or one-on-one.  What happened as you spoke those affirmations to your child?

3) Review the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23.  Be on the lookout for these things in your children!  Discipline them toward producing more good fruit by affirming these traits when you see them.

Parenting, Uncategorized 9 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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