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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Date Night Giveaways: 1K Giveaway Day 5

This giveaway is now closed!  Thank you for participating!

It’s Friday and we’re celebrating Date Night here at Five in Tow.  I’ve got three great prizes to make date night–or any night–special!

First, I’m giving away a second Rekindling Romance e-kit from Jason and Jami Balmet.

Rekindling Romance E-kit

This e-kit arrives just in time for some fun Valentine’s Day planning.  I love the fact that every single idea in this kit is fun and do-able no matter what the budget or circumstances (like the babysitter cancels).  It’s a date night in your in-box!

Don’t forget to hop over to Jami’s Facebook page or website for an extra entry.  You’ll be blessed!

Next, my friend Sunny is sending one winner a box of Belgian chocolates from her home in Belgium!  I do not have a picture of these aforementioned chocolates because they have not yet arrived, and when they do arrive, I will not be taking any pictures of them because if I do, I will eat them.  All. Of. Them.

So.  No photos.  Instead, I will share Sunny, who has been a friend of mine (across the miles) for many, many years.  She is now teaching Spanish and French to high school students on a NATO base in Belgium.  Sunny loves to explore, and when she does, she brings us beautiful stories and pictures like this:

I love reading her blog and living vicariously through her!  I’m kind of praying that if my husband’s application to Active Duty chaplaincy is accepted, we’ll get stationed right there by the chocolates beautiful scenery.  Read her stories and you’ll see why!

My final prize for our Date Night Giveaway was donated by my very favorite reader (besides my husband):  my mom!  She reads every one of my posts and has always supported me (except in this case).  My mom is also an avid knitter, crocheter, and purveyor of all things crafty.  Growing up, I was always wearing something handmade just for me.

My Mom, aka Auntie Annie, is rewarding one of my readers with a made-to-order scarf.   She will give you style and color options and you can choose!

Striped scarf

Hand knit, hand dyed wool scarf. Thanks, sheep!

Glitter scarf

Made with yarn from Italy, the glitter scarf will brighten up any winter wardrobe!

My mom and my step-dad run a little hobby farm my grandparents started.  It is filled with obstinate sheep (my words, not theirs).  They harvest the wool, and Grandma and Mom dye it themselves, spin it, and make it into all sorts of wonderfulness.  You can read all about the little farm that holds my heart at their website.  If you love natural fibers or are looking for some fantastic wool batting for quilts, this is your place!

love-you-quilt-2

My mother would kill me if I posted her picture online. Instead, her she is in quilt form.

How to Enter

1) I like to keep giveaways simple.  All you have to do to be entered for this giveaway is to comment below!  That’s it!  It would be fabulous if you also subscribed to my blog, followed me on Twitter, or liked my Facebook page, but I can’t make that a requirement because of Facebook policies (and it also complicates things and that sort of defeats the whole “simple” thing).

2) Now, I know some of you are over-achievers and want to do more to increase your chances of winning.  Okay. Here you go: you  may earn extra entries by visiting and commenting on our sponsors’ blogs, Facebook, or Twitter pages.  Why not subscribe, like, or follow them while you’re there?  Come back here and leave a separate comment to let me know you went a-visiting so I can enter your name twice.

3) Share any story from Five in Tow that has impacted you.  You can even share the giveaway!  Comment below (in a separate comment from any of the above) with the title of the post you shared and you’ll earn a third entry.

4) This giveaway will remain open for three days.  I will draw two winners on February 3 at 4 pm PST and notify the winners.  Prizes will be delivered by the sponsors within 4-6 weeks.

5) Don’t forget!  You still have two days to enter yesterday’s giveaway if you have not already done so, along with the previous two days of giveaways!  Tuesday’s giveaway closes today at 4 pm PST.  Don’t miss it!   Come back tomorrow for two more great prizes!  You can see the complete list here.

Uncategorized 74 Comments

Getting Big: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {21}

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Today, I held a little boy on my lap.  He grasped a book in his hand and kept some by his side for back-ups.

He came to me while the lunch dishes were being cleared and asked me to read him a book.  “Two or three books,” he corrected when he realized I might be inclined to say yes.

I sat on the floor and a little boy who no longer has dimples on his hands sat in my lap.  A little boy who used to fit there as if in a little nest sprawled out his legs in front of him because he doesn’t quite fit there anymore.

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We read Are You My Mother? and a book that was far too scary for him but he said it wasn’t.  I don’t know how going on a bear hunt can not be too scary.  But he’s big.

He’s getting so, so big.

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I smelled his hair and kissed the back of his neck.  He smelled sweetly sweaty, the way little boys do after they’ve been wrestling their brothers, the way baby boys do when you nurse them in the summer and the heat from their bodies against yours makes the sweetest smell you’ve ever known.

Someday, he’ll smell big-boy sweaty, and that’s a different thing entirely.

But not now.  Now, he is still a bit of my baby boy.  He wants to climb up on my lap and read stories.  And on this beautiful day, I think this is the part of motherhood I like best.

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Parenting 11 Comments

When it Doesn’t Add Up: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {20}

Blue-eyed girl

It was the counting by 2’s that got to me.

“Zero—it is zero, right?”  Kya asked as she began.

“Yes, the even numbers start with zero.”

“Okay, zero-two-four-six-eight-who do we appreciate?”  she chants and dances the way we’ve been doing for months.  “Ten…ten-nine-eight-seven-six…”

“No, no Kya, you’re counting backwards now.”

“Oh!” she says with a grin and begins again.  “Two-four-six-eight-ten-twenty-thirty-forty…”

“Wait…now you’re counting by tens.  Remember, counting by two’s is just skip-counting.  Just say our little chant.  Remember our little chant?”  Of course you remember our chant.  We’ve been doing it for months and months and months on end. 

Kya jumps right in, happily chanting all the wrong numbers.  12—14—15—16, she says at last, and I do not tell her she is wrong.

“Let’s write them out on paper,” I say instead.  Sometimes, seeing the numbers helps, but today, she can’t remember which way a 10 goes, and she can’t remember what to call a 12, and she’s sure that 20 should have a three in it, somewhere.

She can’t do it.

She’s six-and-a-half and she can’t do it.  Not today.

I take my heavy heart upstairs, and I think I will not cry.  I will not cry.  Not today.

But I don’t know what it is.  I don’t know what is wrong, and I don’t know how to help.  I have helped so many children, but I can’t help her.

It is agony.  I want nothing more than to protect her from feeling stupid or slow or different.  I want to hug her and tell her it’s okay not to know 1+0 or how many cookies you have left if you eat one.  Just eat them all, I think, and then it won’t matter.

Because Kya is exceptional, and I want her always to know it. 

Under her bright blue eyes and dimpled smile is a pure heart and tender spirit.  Always caring, always attentive, always gentle—that’s my Kya.  She is delightful, and delighted, in every circumstance.  We call her our Sunshine in Seattle, because it’s always sunny when Kya is around.

She is also highly creative and so perceptive, it’s almost unnerving.  Even as a baby, she could tell when something was different, something was new, something was off.  It was her habit, every morning, to survey my wardrobe choices and give me her unrestrained opinion in the sweetest possible way; we nicknamed her “Quality Control.”  She is witty.  She is funny.  She is the only one of our children who gets her father’s humor and the only one who can, so quickly, give it right back.

But she is also soft.  Fragile.  Vulnerable.  It will not take much to crush her.  Not much more than a stack of flashcards she can’t answer.  And I worry about that, way down deep and in words I don’t want to say.  I think of my impatience and I wonder, “Will I be the one to take it from her?  Will I be the one to make her feel less than she is?  Will my beautiful baby grow up to feel inadequate because her mother couldn’t let her be enough?”

That brings the tears out that I said I would not cry.  That brings me to my knees and I beg, beg, God to make me more patient.  Now.

When I come down from upstairs, Kya has drawn a picture for me.  It is a page filled up with circles, each one filled up with a different pattern of beautiful colors.  Her math page has been decorated with patterns and grinning people with legs and arms coming directly out of their heads.  She doesn’t believe in drawing bodies.

She tells the boys all about it, but she can’t think of a word.  “I can see it,” she tells them, “I just can’t say it.”  Her sentences are filled with pauses and slowly spoken phrases as she tries to collect thoughts from a brain that can’t access words very quickly.  When she was a toddler, she had her own language.  It bubbled out of her in giggles and turned-around phrases.  But she knows enough now to try to reach for words that sit just beyond her grasp.

Oh, how I love her.

She laughs at her brothers and her own silly words and they laugh too.  She lets them answer her math facts and then lines them up to tell them Bible stories that are probably heretical and asks them questions that don’t make much sense.

“Paul, what’s first Genesis chapter six?” she asks.

Paul squirms uncomfortably in his chair because he has neglected his lesson.

“It’s God.  The answer is God,” she says.  “Micah?  Mr. Micah?  Do you know who made you?”

“Dod,” says Micah, because his tongue doesn’t quite say the things he thinks.  Kya understands about that.

“Yes.  God,” she says as hushed and holy as possible.  Micah and Paul nod and try to remember that in this class, the answer is always God.

Nursing twins

The answer is always God.   

Who made you?  God.   Who knows your worth?   God.  Who created you just as you are?  God.   Who can be glorified in your weaknesses?  God.  

I believe.  Lord, help my unbelief.

Because it’s one thing to believe it for me.  It’s another thing to believe it for my babies.  It’s one thing to come to terms with my own faults, but God—oh God! –it’s quite another to come to terms with theirs.

That requires faith, and on this beautiful day of motherhood, I find my faith is lacking.  I find my mother-heart tempted to fear.  I find myself worrying when I am told to trust.  Trust.  It is a beautiful thing to be able to trust my children to the God who made them, to see the missing stitch and give them back to the One who knit them together.  It is a beautiful thing to know that love always adds up, even when the math facts don’t.

Joyful child

Parenting 31 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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