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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

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Fear {Day 15}

Welcome to our series! Find Day 1 here.

“We are brave of all scary.”—Paul, age 4

 

This past week, I sat with three different women who had faced some of the deepest fears I could ever imagine.  One of them is a dear friend who is facing single parenthood after the man she loved and trusted confessed a sin that left her breathless.  She is forced to answer questions she never thought would be asked by a son she never thought she’d have to raise alone.

Another woman told me how she struggles this time of year because it brings up the memory of the day she came home from work to find out her eighth grade son had never made it on the school bus.  Just minutes after Judy kissed him good-bye, he had been attacked and murdered by someone who wanted the things they would have given away for nothing.  They found their youngest child dead on the floor near their bed where he was trying to hide.

The third discovered she and her husband had incompatible genes.  Together, they had a 1 in 4 chance of creating a child with an incurable and excruciating disorder.  But they did not know it until an ultrasound of their first child showed it.  It took a little baby being born into a hopeless situation to learn what lingered in their DNA.  By then it was too late to help him: a little baby was born into a life of pain, and a woman was born into motherhood by a child she could not keep.  This friend had to give her son back to heaven five years after he had been given to her on earth.

These are the stories that seize my heart as a mother.  I listen, watching the faces of these women, and I wonder how they ever survived, how they are surviving.  They embody everything I fear as a mother: losing a child, illness, disease, betrayal, abandonment, and more.

I realize I am a fearful person, a fearful mother.  The traumatic events of my life—real or imagined—have left me quick to flinch, and I respond with the classic fight-or-flight impulse.  I respond in anger or I retreat into avoidance.  I control or I over-protect.  I accuse or I suspect.  Fear is the catalyst of all sorts of actions that are not love.  It keeps me from loving and enjoying my children because it binds up my heart and doesn’t leave it free to beat the way it should.  I cannot truly love them when I am fearful.

In fact, it seems to me that love is the opposite of fear.  When Adam and Eve disobeyed God, it was not hate they felt first, but fear.  As soon as that awful choice was made, their hearts began to quiver, and they cowered at the familiar sound of their Lord walking in the garden.  Everything that was beautiful and lovely now cast shadows and harbored danger.  They knew the most lovely thing was the most dangerous of all.

Our children are the most lovely things we have been allowed to create.  But because they are so lovely, they are the most dangerous of all.  We fear losing them.  We fear hurting them and being hurt by them.  We fear not being able to control them and being embarrassed by them.  We fear failure at not parenting them well.

All that fear rushes into the places where love should reign and deceives us into thinking we are really loving our children when in fact, we are acting out of fear.  We are coating them in hand-sanitizer and telling them they can’t date until they’re thirty and calling them fifteen times a night to ask them where they are–not because we love them but because we fear what might happen to them.  We get angry when they jump off of things they shouldn’t or run across the street without looking because we fear they will break.

We know we live in a broken world, and we must walk amongst the shards.  We know we will get cut but we don’t know how deep, and that is the fear.  So we respond the only way we know how, by instinct rather than faith, in the hopes of getting out with as little damage as possible.  We allow fear to reign where love longs to dwell.

If only we understood that love is more powerful than fear!  It is the original beautiful thing, and fear is but a broken shard, no longer beautiful, and no longer good.  Fear does not have the same beauty and it does not hold the same power.  The words of truth confirm it.  “There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear.”  (1 John 4:18)

There is no fear in love.  How I want that to be true!  I want to love my husband so perfectly, I never fear for his loyalty.  I want to love my children so perfectly, I never try to guard their freedom or control their actions.

But I cannot love perfectly.  That part of the verse does not apply to me at all.  It applies only to Christ, whose perfect love stepped into my world of shadows and laid His life over the shards.  Into the midst of all my fear, Christ has come.  Christ is.   

In the midst of the very real and dangerous moments, I find Him abiding.  There, the sweetness of Christ demonstrates real love and allows me the freedom to let go of fear.  I have never been in a situation in my life, even the most fearful moments, where I did not find Christ.

But I have found this to be true: I have had less fear in the actual traumatic events in my life than I have had in the imagined events that never came to pass.  How I worry and fret and fear for things that God never ordained for me!  How many times have I feared because my husband had to drive home in the snow?  How many times have I planned his funeral because he was two hours late?  How many times have I diagnosed my child’s cough as pneumonia and allowed my mind to bind me up with terror?

That is when I must turn to faith instead of fear.  Fear does not have the power to change the course of events.  It only keeps me from fulfilling my purposes in the time and space God has ordained for me.  It keeps me from enjoying my children and cherishing my husband.

Instead of giving in to fear, I must cling to this truth: Christ’s love is greater than anything I could imagine.  He is sufficient for this moment, and He will be sufficient for whatever comes to pass.  His love will abide wherever He chooses to lead.

Where Christ abides, I am free to love and enjoy my children without fear.

In a world of shadows, Christ abides.

Please join us tomorrow for Day 16: Weakness

For further thought:

1) Are you living under the weight of fear?  My friend gave me this suggestion: think of your fear and imagine Christ in the midst of it.  Can you see Him there?  Can you trust Him to love you through it?

2) When I am afraid, I love to meditate on Psalm 23.  You may know it by heart.  When you are struggling through difficult situations or facing future fears, read it over and over again.  Let the words sink deep into your heart.  Hold onto the fact that Christ will permeate any future hardships.

3)  2 Corinthians 10:5 talks about taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.  Are you allowing your fearful thoughts to control you, or are you taking them captive to the truth that Christ will be sufficient in all things?  Ask God to help you discipline your mind toward faith.

Parenting 10 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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