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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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To the Woman Who Loved Him First

You Loved Him First

To the woman who loved him first:

an open letter to my mother-in-law on my anniversary

You loved him first, of course. I think you loved him better, too. Now that I am a mother, I know this. There is a way a mother loves better than anyone else ever can.

Because you loved him before, before he was anything but yours. You loved him when the only thing you knew about him was that he was a gift from God, and that was enough.

You loved him knowing you wouldn’t be able to keep him. Knowing he would never love you as much as you loved him. Knowing that one day, you wouldn’t even be the most important woman in his life anymore.

You loved him for me.

Long before I came along, you were there, growing that boy of yours into the man who would be mine. You shaped his character with godly virtues and hard corrections, discovered his gifts, delighted in his talents, and ceaselessly encouraged his calling.

Not that it was easy. I am a mother too, now, and I know this. There were scary nights and temper tantrums and habits that had to be broken. There were times you looked at that boy and wondered if you’d ever see the man.

You had to love him enough to discipline him, to make him do the things he didn’t want to do, and let him learn the hard lessons. You had to sit up with him night after night after night, helping him do his homework so one day, I could sit by his side at his graduation. All of them.

Woman who loved him first

You loved him when it was hard.

And that has made loving him all the easier for me.

By your example, you taught that little boy what love is, how it is sacrifice and time and commitment. How it is sincere and good and kind. How it has to be given away.

He did give it away—to someone else. On our wedding day, fifteen years ago, he promised me the same kind of unconditional love you had shown to him.

He could make that promise to me because you had loved him well.

You didn’t do it perfectly. I am a mother now, and I know that too.

But somehow, in loving him first, you loved me best.

All these years, your son has poured out on me the love you poured into him.  On this, the anniversary of your boy becoming my man,  I am grateful.  I can think of no other woman I would rather share my husband with.  Thank you for being the woman who loved him first.

It has made all the difference.

Because she loved him first

Because she loved him first

Marriage, Parenting 5 Comments

All Things New: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {26}

Pink Rhododendron

Halfway through the morning, the weather changed.  The lazy grey clouds were thrown off over the mountains like covers, and sleepy-eyed sky appeared.

Kya had already drawn a fluffy cloud on her weather chart, but no one minded the inconvenience of erasing it and starting over with a yellow-rayed sun.

I was going to have to find my sunglasses.

It was warm enough—just—to play outside without mittens and take one more stab at winning the argument with Mom about running around outside without a coat.  It turned into the kind of day that makes the early lambs jump around in the field and compels dogs to roll in things they shouldn’t.

It was a day that felt new, like mercy.

Dry leaf and sunset

Mercy is something I need.  I have felt a little bit brown around the edges lately, a little too tired and buried a little too deep.  I am back to my old mistakes of taking on too much and saying no to too little.  All week I struggled to keep up in a race I never should have been running in the first place.

Little things got under my skin, like rocks, and I felt gravely.  I said things to my husband I shouldn’t have said and didn’t really mean.  It’s always easier if it’s his fault than if it’s mine.  It’s always easier to feel trapped by him than to acknowledge the fact that I’ve imprisoned myself.

But I don’t think he knows how to build a cage as well as I do.

If there’s one thing I am good at, it’s walling myself up with too many commitments.  I am good at finding ways to chain myself to the clock and the calendar and the to-do list.  I am good at scrambling my priorities and fighting him when he tries to set me free and straighten me out.

I think that if I can build a cage, then I can get myself out of it.  So I clench my teeth and set my resolve and make everyone miserable while I try to prove that I can do it.

The truth is, I can’t do it.  Not well, not godly, not in a way that is healthy.

This last past week was not healthy.

But today was the kind of day that forces me outside.  I have to hang something on the clothesline, even though nothing will dry.  I untangled the bed from the flannel sheets and extra blankets which have held us captive since sometime in October.  They hang head-down and penitent on the line.

Clothesline

It is good to be aired out, I think, and to start fresh.

I stand out in the yard and fill my lungs with the smell of the waking earth.  I notice that the deeply hidden daffodils and tulips are beginning to push their way up through the dark and the dirt and the dead of winter.  Their tender green shoots push aside the brown fallen leaves and stretch toward the new mercy of spring.  They are dirty, still, from being so long in the ground.

But they are growing again, even after a season of dormancy and darkness.

I am a little dirty too, a little rough around the edges.  But on this beautiful day of motherhood, I cling to the hope that God is not done with me yet.  My sins may be chronic, but so is His mercy.  He coaxes me out of the dirt and into the light.  I am well aware that I have not done everything right or well or good.  But I am also aware that God is in the business of making all things new—including me.

Crocus shoots

Parenting 10 Comments

The Most Beautiful of Days (or, How I Snagged My Husband)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Twelve years ago today, I put on a dress my mother sewed and stood in a church decorated with Christmas trees and white lights and walked down an aisle to meet my groom.  He smiled when he saw me, and I remember wanting to drink in the moment, to freeze it like a photograph in my mind so I never forgot the way he looked or how I felt when I saw him.

We had dated less than two weeks before he asked me to marry him.  He had not kissed me or told me he loved me, and he didn’t have a ring.  But there was nothing to say but yes.

I had known there was only one answer long before he asked the question.  Week after week, as we shared a van to a ministry at a church deep in the backstreets of Chicago, I watched and listened and tried hard to guard my heart from feeling more than it should about a man who was not mine.

He had not said one word to encourage my affections for him.  He had not given me any indication that he thought of me at all.  We had even gone out for coffee once, after having Easter dinner at a professor’s house.  He had introduced me as someone who was planning to be a missionary.  But he did not know that my plans had changed, and that God was asking me to do something even more audacious with my life.

“Actually,” I said, “I am thinking about going to seminary next…and writing…” It was the first time I had said it out loud.  I waited for the disappointment I thought would come.  After all, I was giving up missions for writing.  There was something profoundly un-Jesus about that.

He stopped.  His face betrayed his shock, but not disappointment.

We talked the whole way home.  Something had shifted in his mind and left questions where certainty had been.  We did not run out of conversation before we ran out of road, so he invited me out to coffee where we talked late into the night about everything from theology to ministry to the homes in which we grew up.  He listened like the rest of the world had melted away.  What’s more, he understood.

But that was all.  The next day came and the day after and he did not call.  I had let myself imagine something that was not there, I thought.  Foolish, foolish girl.

Jeff’s birthday fell shortly after Easter that year, so I made him a card.  I was not going to make him a card, and I certainly was not going to give him a card.  But the more I thought about not giving him a card, the more the ideas came until the idea for the card was so clever and funny, it had to be given.  It was the single most forward thing I had ever done in my life.  We were not even friends, not really, not friends-who-make-cards-for-each-other kind of friends.  As I reached out my hand to give it to him, my face burned with the realization.  Those stupid clever words had conspired against me.

He smiled and laughed in all the right places.  “This is so great!” he beamed.  I went back to my dorm room and banged my head against the wall and promised myself I would never ever never ever never ever write a card for a man I was not dating.  Ever.

The worst part was, it didn’t even work.  The card had not been quite clever enough.  Finals week came and the whirlwind that was Jeff’s graduation week.  I had hoped he would call, ask me out to coffee again, but he didn’t.  I did not even see him the entire week of graduation.  Soon he would be leaving for the summer, I thought, and I would never see him again.

I chastised myself for thinking about it at all.  “Guard your heart, Kristie,” I told myself again and again.  But I could not help feeling like I had met someone who would forever change the standard, who would forever be the mark that all other men must meet.

Then one day, he called.  I was so startled, I did not recognize his voice.  He had never called.  Ever.  My floor was a mess with the inner workings of a senior project.  It was finals week for those of us who were not graduating, and I was a caffeinated, sleep-deprived mess.

“This is Jeff,” he said.

“Jeff?”  Jeff who?

“A bunch of us are going rollerblading.  Wanna come?”

Ohmygoodness.  It was that Jeff.  THE Jeff.

I looked at my floor and the projects I had to do and considered the fact that I had never been rollerblading in my life.  I would very likely kill myself or someone else if I ventured out onto the sidewalks of Chicago on wheels.  “Sure,” I said with feigned confidence.

I was going to throw up.

Over the next few days, he found excuses to invite me along with the rollerblading crowd.  I did not kill anyone.  The biker I mowed over in the crosswalk appeared to be recovering nicely.  Still, I could not keep up.  This turned out to be a beautiful handicap.  Time after time, we were left alone in that great big city.  The more time I spent with him, the more I liked him, and the more I liked him, the harder it was to realize that he did not feel the same about me.

One night, he met me in the usual spot, but this time, he was all alone.  “I thought we’d go out by ourselves tonight,” he said.  I dared not hope it was because he liked me, or wanted to be with me, or had any feelings toward me at all.  I dared not hope.  But I did.

We skated along the moonlit shores of Lake Michigan and headed north to Lincoln Park.  It was May and the air was warm.  The sky was bright from the city lights and the lamps along the path that led to the zoo.  I was sweating buckets like I always did when I combined physical exertion with a fear of imminent death.  The back of my shirt was soaked and my bangs dripped.

“I’ve never seen anyone sweat like you,” Jeff observed.  It was very kind of him to notice.  If my face had not already been as red as a lobster, I might have blushed.

“Thank you,” I said.

“Let’s sit down here a minute.”  He plopped in the grass and waited for me to plod my way over with as much grace as I could muster under the circumstances.  Jeff picked a strand of grass and twirled it in his fingers.  “You know what, Kristie Barnhill?” he asked.  “I think you’re pretty great.”

Wait…what?

“I think you’re pretty great too, Jeffrey Glover,” I said.  It was a very unpoetic way to say everything I had been feeling.  But it was all I could say, all I could think.

“I think you’re pretty great,” he repeated, and then he explained his philosophy of dating which ended with a softly spoken phrase, “I’d like to see if we’re compatible for marriage.”

I could not breathe.  I managed to sputter something eloquent like, “Okay…” with the last of the oxygen left in my lungs.  I stared at him with a dazed sort of look that must have been very attractive.

He took a scrap of paper out of his pocket on which he had scrawled a series of questions in handwriting so small, I could not read them in the dim light.  He had a different view of marriage than most men his age, and it was so unromantic in its rightness, I was astounded.

It was not about feelings.  In fact, Jeff later admitted that he didn’t feel particularly attracted to me at first, but that he had seen something in me that he thought might complement his strengths and weaknesses.  He wanted to know if God had gifted each of us and formed our thoughts and emotions in such a way that we could better glorify Him together than apart.

There were questions that needed to be answered.  Some of these he had answered by simple observation.  He had been watching me, Jeff confessed, ever since he found out I was not going to the mission field.  He had not known for sure if I was interested in him, but there was that card, that awkward little card that had communicated far more than I had intended.

Still, Jeff did not want to engage my heart too soon, because hearts are hard things to wrangle.  So he had waited and watched and checked off as many answers to his questions as he could.

But now the time had come to ask the things that could not be determined by simple observation, and so he had to let me in on his little secret.

In less than two weeks of talking and praying, we knew the answer.  It was reckless.  Crazy.  My parents has not even met him, had hardly even heard of him, but I was not a reckless person, by nature.  I was not the kind of kid who did things like this, unless I was convinced it was of God.

It did not take long for the feelings to follow where God had led.  I remember the first time Jeff said anything near a compliment.  “Wow,” he said one night over coffee, “you have very pretty eyes.”  He said it took him by surprise.  Other men had said more to me after meeting me for the very first time.  But when Jeff said it, I knew he meant it, and I have held the memory of that moment in my mind all these years.  It was the day my fiance began to believe his bride was beautiful.

Jeff’s mother found a ring in a pawn shop and Jeff bought it. The jeweler said the diamond was clear and bright.  In a jewelry box on her dresser, my mother had kept the ring my father had given her when he asked her to be his bride.  I remember when she took it off after he died and how empty her hand looked without it.  It seemed right, somehow, to take that ring and make it the foundation of mine.

Jeff’s mother had a ring too.  It was missing some stones but the gold was good.  All those rings were given to the jeweler, who took the ransomed thing and the heartbroken thing and the unwanted thing and turned them into a sign of a covenant.  The gold from our mothers’ rings were melted together to make one.  Two diamonds, redeemed, set with a third to make them complete.

It was the beginning of the most beautiful of days, the foundation of a marriage that has been the single greatest gift of God’s grace in my life.

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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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