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Kristen Anne Glover

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Friday Funnies–The Quote Wall

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At the Burke Museum 3/1/12

 

3/1/12

No matter what I say, I cannot convince my five-year-old that the name of the restaurant is not “Lickdonald’s.”

 

3/1/12

“I’m getting really tired of city life,” Jonathan said with a heavy sigh from the back seat of the minivan, where he’d had to endure the rush of the Seattle U-District for all of five minutes while we made our way to the Burke museum. “I miss the wildlife,” he said wistfully. Yep, if there’s one thing we’re known for out here in the vast, open suburbs, it’s the wildlife.

 

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Kya, 5, loses her first tooth during dinner! 3/1/12

 

2/29/12

‎”Everybody loves me. They do.” Micah, displaying all the confidence and security of a happy toddler. I hope he feels the same way when he’s 15.

 

2/28/12

“How old are you, Paul?”

“BIG!”

I must have missed that birthday.

 

2/28/12

“I need a hug.”–Paul, 3, after seeing what was on his plate for lunch.

 

 

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Counting the Hours

Counting the Hours

When I was a younger mom, I used to count the hours. I counted the meager number of hours I slept each night, the number of hours I spent rocking a screaming baby, and the number of hours I spent nursing. I counted the number of hours I spent making meals and cleaning up the kitchen, the number of hours spent folding laundry and vacuuming. I counted the number of hours my boss was late in picking up her son, and how many hours I spent in traffic trying to get home. I counted the number of hours I spent editing my husband’s papers and the hours he spent away at class each day. I counted the hours until he came home.

With all the hours counted, I knew just how tired I could be, or irritated, or unproductive. I knew how much to require of other people and how much to coddle myself. I knew what I could or could not do.

I knew the hours were against me that first Sunday back to church after the baby was born. I smelled like sour milk and I was pretty sure I had forgotten to put mascara on my left eye. None of my clothes fit right yet and I wanted to burn the maternity skirt I was obligated to wear even though I was no longer pregnant.

It only took ten minutes to get to church, but by the time we arrived, the baby already needed to be changed and my toddler said she was hungry. Had I packed her a snack? I wasn’t sure. The entire morning had been a blur. How could two children be so much harder than one?

We were late, and as we walked in from the back parking lot, we could hear the sounds of singing coming from the open doors. I didn’t want to go inside. I knew I would spend the entire service in the cry room, changing and feeding the baby and trying to keep my nineteen-month old entertained. Other toddlers were content to play in the nursery. Mine screamed until her face turned purple and one of the nervous young nursery helpers was sent to find me before my daughter went into convulsions on the alphabet rug.

The cry room was already crowded with other mothers and babies in various stages of crying, sleeping, and nursing. I looked around for a seat, trying not to step on the clingy toddler clutched to my leg. Her little fingers were creating a run in my tights the size of the Grand Canyon.

The baby decided he was no longer enjoying his stay in the car carrier. He rolled his head to the side and wrinkled up his nose, clutching his fists together in preparation for a scream. I rocked the carrier with my foot and dug around in the diaper bag. I knew I had packed a burp cloth and a blanket, but I couldn’t seem to find either. Within seconds, the baby’s face was bright red and his tongue had curled back to let out the full force of his dissatisfaction.

I found the blanket and decided the burp cloth could wait. I tried to cover up so I could nurse him discreetly, but his body was rigid and he refused to acknowledge the fact that I was finally prepared to feed him. Meanwhile, my daughter had found a book in the toy bin and was tugging at my sleeve. “Mommy, read it?” she asked. “Read it?”

“Jus’ a second,” I mumbled, trying to hold the blanket to my chest with my chin. I never understood how some women could nurse in public, as if it didn’t require and extra set of hands and a tent.

Somewhere under the blanket, my baby found what he was looking for and his screams subsided. My face was hot and I was developing a spasm in my shoulder.

A woman in the rocking chair across the room smiled at me. It was a simple gesture, but I suddenly felt like I needed that smile more than anything else she could have given me.

Counting the hours

I couldn’t remember seeing her before. She was tall and large boned, with deeply angled features and long, fawn-colored hair that had been warmed by the sun. In older times, she would have been called a handsome woman, with a strong, practical sort of beauty. She wore a plain linen jumper and summer sandals, like she had just come from a day at the ocean. When she smiled, the lines around her sea-blue eyes betrayed the fact that she was not a young mother, but there was a constancy about her that made me think she had always looked the same, and always would.

Just then, another woman came in the room, her arms loaded with supplies. Gigantic pink and purple flowers exploded all over her dress. She wore a hat covered in more flowers. A real hat, with fake flowers. People in the Northwest don’t wear hats to church, I realized. But they do in Ipswich. She took one look at the woman in the corner and cried, “Bryn! Are you back for a visit? Oh my goodness, look at that little one! So precious! And look at you! I hear you’re expecting another already?”

Counting the hours

Bryn smiled easily. She patted the baby in her arms with capable determination, like she wasn’t concerned in the least about having two babies so close together. I guessed her son was no more than three months old, which meant that her two would be closer together than mine. Almost like twins.

I was suspicious of her confidence. I wanted to tell her that she had no idea what she was in for, that having two wasn’t as easy as she seemed to think it would be.

“Let’s see, this will be number seven, right?” the boisterous newcomer continued as she refilled the baby wipes and checked the diaper supply.

Seven? I glanced over at the woman in the rocking chair. I was staring. I knew I was staring, but I couldn’t stop staring even though my daughter was stealing Cheerios from someone else’s purse.

She didn’t look like the mother of six and soon-to-be seven children, although as soon as I thought it, I realized I didn’t know what a mother of seven should look like. I guess I thought she should be a little less rested, a little less like she just blew in from a week at the beach. She didn’t look like she might lose it if someone asked her what was for lunch.

Clearly, I was in the presence of a super-woman, and I felt small and inadequate and insecure, like she could see right through me with some sort of x-ray vision. She could probably see that I had a pile of dirty dishes in my sink at home, that I hadn’t read my daughter a bed-time story in a week because I was too tired, and that I was angry when the baby wouldn’t go back to bed after his 3 am feeding.

The baby squirmed. I had forgotten to burp him. My daughter flopped across my knees and let her book drop to the ground. I had not read it.

Bryn was looking at me and smiling. I wasn’t about to fall for that again. I was duty-bound to dislike her, no matter how kind she seemed. Seven children. My word. I couldn’t even handle two.

“The first two are the hardest,” Bryn said apologetically, as if she could read my mind. The cry room had emptied out and we were alone.

Her words melted me. Stupid super-powers.

“How do you do it?” I blurted out, even though I didn’t really mean to. “When was the last time you got any sleep?”

Bryn brushed a wisp of long hair behind her ear thoughtfully. “I don’t know. I’ve never really worried about that,” she said quietly as she rocked her baby back and forth. “I figure God is big enough to give me just what I need for each day. Maybe it’s not as much as I would like or as much as I think I need, but I have to believe that it’s sufficient for the moment. He promises that, you know?”

I swallowed hard. I was not in the mood for a sermon.

But Bryn started to tell her story, and I found the words settling deep into my soul, obliterating my defenses. She talked about how she had lost three babies before a doctor took the time to figure out why her body wouldn’t let her carry a baby to term. She talked about the fear that surrounded each pregnancy and a heart that wouldn’t let her love a baby she might lose. She talked about how something in her died when the tests that showed her baby would have Down Syndrome, and how she couldn’t stop crying when he was born healthy. They named him Samuel, after a baby in the Bible who was born out of a barren womb to a mother who had known the taste of tears.

“I don’t think Hannah worried much about sleepless nights,” Bryn said.

I didn’t think she did either. I couldn’t help but think that in the middle of the night, when the stillness of Hannah’s home was interrupted by a baby’s cry, she did not take her eyes from his to think about how little she had slept or how much she needed her energy for the day ahead. How long would it take a mother like that to forget how much she’d been given? Eternity could not take the memory of it from her.

“I bet she held Samuel close as long as she could.”

I nodded.

Bryn shifted her baby to the other shoulder and sighed. “I’m not saying it’s not hard. It is. It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done. My back hurts and my stomach looks like stretched out Silly Putty, and if you saw my house, you’d be embarrassed for me,” she smiled and I realized I liked her again. “But somehow, God saw fit to give me these babies for this time, and I can’t help but being awed by that.”

Counting the Hours

On the way home, I stared at my reflection in the window. Spring green fields flecked with dandelions passed over my face. The cherry trees were blooming and the songbirds had come back. My mind went to sparrows, who don’t have to worry about seed for tomorrow. I wondered why I had so little faith. Had I ever been in want? Had I ever been lacking? No matter how many times He’d proved it, I didn’t really believe that God could give me just what I needed for each new day.

I thought about lilies, which don’t labor for their clothes, and to the woman in a linen jumper who knew what it was to be buried deep, like a bulb in the frozen earth. There in the darkness of broken dreams and aspirations, she had died to the plans in her own heart and to the things she thought were certain, but which never came to pass. Then, in the coldness of late winter rains, when everything seemed hopeless and lost, God brought new life out of the ground and clothed her in radiance and splendor. I wanted to be beautiful like that. But dying is hard.

That night, I put my nineteen-month-old to bed and settled down to nurse the baby. But the strangeness of a Sunday schedule had left him confused, and he wouldn’t nurse, and he wouldn’t sleep. He didn’t want to be held, and he certainly didn’t want to be put down. I let out an exasperated sigh.

“You should go to bed,” my husband said, looking up from his desk. He was studying for a final. “I’ll take care of the baby.”

I was so tired, I couldn’t even think of what I needed to do to go to bed. “Just go to bed,” he insisted. “There’s nothing you have to do that can’t wait until tomorrow.”

I crawled in under the covers and pulled them up around my neck. I put a pillow over my head for extra measure.  The alarm clock blazed 11:27.  11:27, 11:27. He’ll be up at three, I thought. That’s not enough sleep…

I got up and walked out to the living room.

“He doesn’t need you,” my husband teased, casting a look at the baby in the bouncy seat.

I handed him the alarm clock.

“What’s this?” he asked.

“Just keep that for me,” I said. “Tonight, I’m going to get enough sleep.”

I headed back to bed, and for the first time since I’d brought a baby into my home, I didn’t count the hours.

When my newborn son woke up in the middle of the night, I remembered Hannah, and I held him to me and studied his face. His cloudy blue eyes looked inky in the dim light and he made little grunting noises that I knew wouldn’t last. One day, I’d hold him and realize that he didn’t make them anymore. One day I’d look into his eyes and notice they weren’t blue anymore. One day, I’d look at him and realize he wasn’t a baby any more, and I’d wonder where the hours had gone.

For just a moment, it seemed like time stood still. I considered all that I had been given, and I was awed into silence.  A God who created such perfect hands and feet could surely care for me all the hours of my life. Finally, I was ready to believe it.

“And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work.”—2 Corinthians 9:8

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Parenting 162 Comments

The Pasta Plates

It all started with the discovery of a set of pasta making attachments for my Kitchenaid mixer.  They were hidden in a box labeled “Kitchen Things—not important.”  In the chaos of a cross-country move, they had been shoved into a storage room and forgotten for ten years.

Then one day, I went down to our storage room on a quick errand and ended up spending two days organizing, sorting, rearranging, and opening boxes I hadn’t seen in years.   I didn’t expect to find much in the “Kitchen Things” box.  After all, the Sharpie said it was unimportant.

But the Sharpie lied.

There, underneath a few extra pieces of flatware and a stack of manuals, was the box of brand-new pasta plates. These were the pasta plates I wished I had owned, the pasta plates I had drooled over whenever I ventured into the kitchen section of my local Fred Meyer.  These were the pasta plates that could transform this lowly domestic housewife into a bustling Italian grandmother who served up copious amounts of fresh pasta to multiple generations of little Glovers as we gathered around our dinner table in the glow of the setting sun.

Now, that dream was within my reach.

I rushed upstairs and showed the kids.  “Can you really make spaghetti?” Faith asked, wide-eyed.

It was 5:30 pm, but how long could it take to learn how to use my new gadget?  I had watched enough Iron Chef to know that making pasta was child’s play.  I fished the instructions out of the box and soon I was on my way to making some mean linguini.

The kids were anxious to help.  I could almost hear a little violin playing in the background as we ground the sprouted wheat and threw in some fresh eggs and a little water.  Soon we had a lovely dough.  At least it looked lovely, but my inner Italian grandmother was taking a while to warm up, so I wasn’t really sure.

“We’re going to make spaghetti!  We’re going to make spaghetti!” the kids chanted.  All five of them crowded around the machine.  “Put the dough in!”  They pleaded.  I stretched over their heads and dropped in the first ball of dough.  We waited.  Soon little strands of pasta began to appear.  The twins clapped.  It was official: Mommy’s mixer was the coolest Play-doh fun factory of all time.

My husband walked by.  “What are you guys doing?” he asked, peering into the side of the bowl.

“We’re making pasta!” I said cheerfully.

He looked confused.  “Can’t you buy pasta?  At the store?  For like, a dollar?”  I sensed I was about to receive the “Isn’t-your-time-worth-anything?” speech.

“Of course you can buy it at the store,” I said, resisting the urge to smack him in front of the children.  “But look!  I can make it myself!”  I thought that said it all.

“Why?” he asked. The question took me aback.  Why?   Because I can, that’s why!   Isn’t that reason enough?  I thought back to my childhood, where dinnertime discussions often led to a search through an encyclopedia or manual and ended with a trip to the barn to look for just the right scrap that might just work to make that thing that somebody wondered if they could make.  The question of whether or not we could do something was always more fascinating than question of whether or not we should.   We had a litany of successes and failures to prove it.

I shifted my weight from one foot to the other and tried to come up with an actual, rational reason for making pasta myself.  But before I could, the kids piped up.

“We’re making pasta because it will taste better!” Faith said.

“And it will be better for us!” added Kya.

“Don’t you know that everything Mom makes is better than the store?” Jonathan pointed out the obvious.  I secretly resolved to buy those children a pony.

“We’ll see,” Jeff grinned as the pasta started oozing out of the machine at a frighteningly rapid rate.   For a chaplain, that man has remarkably little faith.

He walked out of the kitchen and left me with my project, which was beginning to take on a life of its own.  The little strands had gotten longer, and longer, and the pasta began to come out faster and faster.  I wasn’t sure what to do.  The instructions cautioned against letting the pasta stick together, so I threw some flour at it whenever it seemed appropriate.

“Mom’s throwing flour!” the kids squealed with delight.

The pasta kept on coming, faster and faster.

“Should I cut it?” I asked my sous chefs.  The instructions hadn’t said anything about cutting the pasta.

“Yes, cut it!” Jonathan shouted.  He was always willing to support any activity that involved knives.

But cutting pasta while it was oozing out of the machine and attempting to keep it from sticking together required more dexterity than I proved to have.  The beautiful linguini clumped together hopelessly.

“Is it supposed to do that?” began the chorus by my side.

“I’ve never seen any pasta that looks like that.”

“It looks like a big pile of worms!”

“Eeeeeeew!”

“Yucky!”

“I’m not eating that!”

“Do you have any macaroni and cheese?  I’m hungry.”

I stared at my pile of pasta.  The kids stared with me.  Many adjectives came to mind, but most of them involved the kinds of words I had banished from our family thesaurus.

“Well,” I said, trying to sound positive, “I guess we let it dry for a bit and then we’ll see.”  But secretly I was thinking, I’ve totally messed this up.  I wasted three cups of flour and an hour of our time and now dinner is going to be hopelessly late and the kids are going to be scarred for life because they will forevermore associate pasta with dried up worms!  What was I thinking?

The magic was over.  The violin players turned back into a Veggie Tales CD, the fresh bread sticks turned back into Cheerios, and my inner Italian was transformed back into an Anglo-Saxon mixed breed who was genetically programed to boil things.  I should have made potatoes.

Instead, I boiled up the pasta and served it piping hot at exactly 7:15.   By then, the children were so hungry, they didn’t mind eating worms.  They chewed through their clumpy strands of pasta with valor, oblivious to the fact that al dente shouldn’t require the use of molars.   Epic failure, I thought to myself.

“I’m sorry the pasta didn’t really turn out,” I said.

“What do you mean?” Jonathan asked between bites.  “It’s the best pasta I’ve ever had!”

“It’s beautiful delicious!” Kya proclaimed, munching happily.
“Mmmm!  Nummy!” Micah said with his mouth full.

Paul just nodded.  The sauce on his face matched his hair.

“And next time we make it, it will be better,” Faith added.  “Not many people get it right the first time,” she said knowingly to Jonathan.

I thought I could hear that violin again.  I looked at my family gathered around my dinner table, and it occurred to me that one day, when I am old and the grandchildren gather around my table and my children tell stories about their mother, they probably won’t remember the time I attempted to make pasta for the first time.  They probably won’t remember how it all clumped together in one massive lump, and how dinner was so late, it almost qualified as breakfast.

But I hope they will remember that their mother was infinitely curious and recklessly determined.  I hope they will remember that their mother was not afraid to try, to investigate, and to learn.  I hope they remember that she threw flour and served worms for dinner.  I hope they will remember that their mother did not always get it right the first time.  But she tried.  And if someone asks them why they make pasta themselves, they won’t have to think up a reason.  I hope they’ll know why.

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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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