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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Shock

Humor, Parenting 6 Comments

What Micah Taught Me

Micah, age 1

Micah and Paul were born at the exact same minute.  They were the exact same height and almost the same weight.  They were both tongue-tied.  They both had the same blue eyes, and even though Paul had a shock of red hair and Micah’s was mousy brown, it was obvious they were twins.

But by the time the boys were six months old, we knew Micah was behind.  By the time they were a year, we knew something was wrong.  It was painfully obvious.  By then, Paul was crawling all over everything and was on the verge of walking, but Micah couldn’t follow him because Micah had yet to crawl.  He didn’t even slither.

Our pediatrician was at a loss as to what was wrong.  She said all kinds of scary things before scribbling out a referral to Children’s Hospital in Seattle where Micah was examined by a team of neurologists.  They wrote lots of notes on little pads of paper while Micah smiled at them and tried to find the Cheerios they’d hidden under brightly colored cups.  “Micah does not play with his toes,” they wrote as they watched him.  “Micah does not roll over.  Micah does not bend his knees.  Micah can’t right himself if he falls over.  Micah can’t grasp a finger.  Micah can’t…Micah can’t…Micah can’t….”

Then, the doctors went out to talk about their findings.  I waited a long time while Micah sat on my lap and played with my necklace.  I wondered what life was going to be like for my sweet little boy.  It is one thing to be behind.  It’s another thing to be behind when you’re a twin. He had a built-in reminder that he didn’t measure up.

Finally, the chief neurologist came in.  She shook my hand warmly and told me what a delightful child Micah was.  “He’s very bright,” she said, and I breathed a sigh of relief.  “His delay is not cognitive; it’s muscular.”  It seemed that every muscle in Micah’s body was weak.  Every muscle was behind.  “He needs a personal trainer and a baby gym,” she concluded.

We were assigned a physical therapist who told me to write goals for Micah.  “Micah will learn to hold my finger.  Micah will learn to roll a ball.  Micah will learn to stand unassisted.”  I wanted to write, “Micah will learn to climb up the steps all by himself!” because at 16 months old, he was heavy.

But Micah could not achieve that goal.  Paul was climbing steps like a monkey, but it didn’t matter what Paul could do, or what any toddler could do.  It didn’t matter what was normal or expected or even desired.  Micah was not any toddler.  He was Micah, and I had to adjust my dreams, wishes, and goals for him based on who he was, not on who I wanted him to be.

Months passed, and then years.  The progress was painfully slow, but still, it was progress.  I quickly learned that achieving the goals was not the goal.  Success, for Micah, was about making steps in the right direction.

I watched Micah and I wondered if I was willing to accept that definition of success.  I like goals.  I like reaching goals even better.  I am not so good at being content with progress, especially when it seems like everyone else is running and I’m just crawling along.  It seems like I should be able to do it!  I should be able to keep my house clean and my kids dressed like they just stepped out of a magazine.  I should be able to make that creative birthday cake and look like I didn’t eat a piece of it.  I should be able to write two blog posts a week, for heaven’s sake, and keep all my kids happy and well-fed and educated.  After all, Facebook and Pinterest tell me that other moms can.  Why can’t I?

Every day, I get up and I aim for that goal.  I do the best job I can.  It’s not always Pinterest-able, but it’s generally a step in the right direction.  So why do I feel so guilty when I am still so far away from the goal?  Why do I feel like everyone is staring at me, writing down notes on their little pads of paper, Kristen can’t…Kristen can’t…Kristen can’t…?

It’s because I forget that I am me.  Not my mother.  Not my sister-in-law.  Not the other mom of five kids who does everything better.  I’m just me, the me with gifts and the me with shortcomings.  Like Micah, I must accept that some things are just going to be hard for me.  It doesn’t matter what is normal or expected or even desired.  I can only do so much.  Some things I will do really well.  And then there’s the rest.

Motherhood involves such a myriad of skills and abilities; it would only stand to reason that I would stink at 50% of them, maybe more if you count sports.  Some things I am just not naturally able to do.  I am deficient.  I am broken.  Sometimes, I really mess it up, and I wonder why I’m the only one who can’t get it all together.

But God did not give these children to the woman who has it all together.  He did not give them to the woman who is better.  He gave them to me.  He didn’t even check out my Facebook profile to see if I qualified.  He didn’t look to see if I am good at planning birthday parties or if I know 50 ways to sneak vegetables into macaroni.  He did not ask me if I felt adequate because it’s never been about being adequate.  It’s about letting God be adequate enough for the both of us.

At the end of the day, when I’ve poured myself in to these lives God has given me, and I am tempted to think that I haven’t been or done enough, I remind myself that I am a lot like Micah.  When I first became a mother, I could not even crawl.  But by God’s grace, I have learned to walk.  His hands have steadied me, and now I can even run.  I may not qualify for a marathon, but then, I was not made for marathons.  I was made to walk with Someone holding my hand, and that is enough.

Micah is now four.  He still struggles with significant speech issues because he can’t seem to get his tongue to do what it should do.  I can’t always get my tongue to do what it should either, so I understand.  He will never be the star of the soccer team.  I understand that, too.  But every day, he continues to try.  He lets me help him make steps in the right direction.  That is something I understand best of all.

He has said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.  —2 Corinthians 12:9

Success

Parenting 51 Comments

Sorrow and the Beautiful Love

The clouds, heavy with sorrow, bent over the sky, deep and gray and so full of tears they could not cry.  It seemed the weight of their anguish would crush the earth, but the weeping would not come.

It had been such a beautiful thing.  That was the irony: only a beautiful thing could leave such an ugly wound.  Only a beautiful thing could hurt like this.

“It will get better,” they said, as if they knew.  They who did not even believe such beautiful things exist.

But she did not want it to get better.  She wanted the sorrow to roll over her and consume her.  She wanted to feel it breaking her.  It was all she had left, this side of love that felt like drowning, like flesh being torn from flesh.  She couldn’t let it go, even though it hurt to hang on, because it was the closest she could get to what she once had.

“Someday, this is going to hurt,” her brain had once tried to tell her what her heart would not hear.  “There is no easy way out of love.”

But by the time she realized it might be that kind of love, it was too late.  Looking back, she was astonished by how quickly it had happened, and how irrevocably she was changed, so that now, in the darkness of her sorrow, she was unable to remember how to see, how to feel, how to be like before.  It seemed she could only see in shadows.

Frenzied, her mind tried to find a way to put everything back the way it was.  It woke her, desperate to convince her that nothing had changed.  It told her they were wrong, that it hadn’t happened, that soon she would find out that it was all a big mistake, and she could run again to her love and hold on for all eternity.

But this was not the kind of thing that could be undone with wishful thinking or sheer power of will.  This was the kind of thing that could never be put right, not while one piece of her was in time, and the other in eternity.

The morning came, hushed and dimly lit, with little to distinguish it from the fading of the night.  Morning, noon, and evening were nothing but a collection of indistinct hours marked by indistinct rising and falling of darkness.  Always there would be darkness, darkness in the air and in the sky, darkness in the shadows that seemed to be a part of her now.

But this kind of love cannot be darkened by shadows.  This kind of love, this beautiful love, cannot be divided by death.

The tears came, and with them, the clouds began to lighten.  Almost imperceptibly, the light filtered through, pushing the shadows to the edges of the pools where her memories drifted.   The shadows sharpened as the light grew stronger, defining and outlining the very things she couldn’t make out before.

Suddenly, she realized she could see.  With breathless clarity she saw the radiance of that beautiful love, not taken from her, but given back to her in its fullness, cleared of all imperfections.  Indeed, it was more real than ever before.

She ran to it and clung to it, this kind of love, this rare, beautiful love, that had come through the darkness and emerged incorruptible.

*Dedicated to my grandma, who lost her beautiful love one year ago today.  “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face…” 

For more of this kind of love, read the remarkable story of one woman’s grief redeemed in John 20.

Fiction, Uncategorized 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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