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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Stay Up Late Nights

twins

This is how we rolled

I sat on the old plaid couch in my living room, nursing loud, slurping newborn twins in the presence of a dozen or so women who had come to my home for a baby shower.

It was awkward, to be sure, but I was too tired to care.

I had slept with the twins on me the night before, and the night before that.  It was the only way they would sleep. When I put them down, they cried, and I cried too because my arms ached with holding them and my breasts hurt from nursing them and all I wanted was just a few seconds to have my body to myself.

But then the sun came up and I smeared concealer under my eyes and tried to hide my still-round figure under a maternity skirt and a once-flattering sweater.  My hair, which had been falling out by the handfuls since the boys were born, spun in crazy spirals on my head, and a smattering of hormone-induced pimples blazed on my chin.

I sat there in the middle of dear friends and tried to appear normal.  But I was on survival mode.  Overnight, I had become the mother of five children, and I was reeling.

But there we were, just a few weeks after my babies were born, the incision in my abdomen still aching, celebrating the miraculous birth of my boys.  It was miraculous, truly, and I had not forgotten.  I was just so tired.

Maybe those dear women knew it.  Maybe they could see right through the mascara.  They did not come with silly games or demand details I didn’t want to share.  As I nursed the twins, they quietly went around the room and gave me words of encouragement and advice.

Some of them did not have children, and their words were the kind that reminded me of the treasure I had in those sleepless nights.

Five babies

My five babies

Some had grown right out of motherhood, and theirs were the words that reminded me to cherish those baby grunts and the closeness of infancy.

Then there was the woman who obviously did not notice how tired I was, or how hard I was trying to keep it all together.  That woman looked right at me, the newly minted mother of five, and said, “The best piece of advice I can give you is to spend time with each of your children one-on-one.”

Her words flooded over my already-drowning spirit.  One-on-one?  I didn’t even get to spend time with myself one-on-one.

It was ridiculous to expect that from me!  Obviously, she didn’t remember the days when it was a triumph just to get the cereal served, and she could never understand what it was like to mother five children ages five and under.    

twin boys

Micah and Paul, my twin boys

I smiled politely, thinking I’d throw away that piece of advice after everyone left. 

But I couldn’t.

Deep down, I knew the wisdom of her words.  In fact, I longed to implement her advice.  How I wanted to hold one child on my lap and listen to one child’s dreams.

It’s just that somewhere during those busy, little years, I began to view my children only as a collective whole.  The days were so full.  They all needed food and water and trips to the bathroom and noses wiped and clean underwear.  It was easier to line them all up and get it done, assembly-line style, than it was to consider if any one of them needed a little more of me than that.

Of course, I knew my children needed more of me than that.  They needed to be cherished, valued, and understood as individuals, not because they were my children, but because each one of them is my child.

I wanted Faith to grow up knowing that I liked her.  I wanted Jonathan to be assured of the fact that I longed to spend time with him.

I wrestled with that advice for a few months.  Then finally, I found a way to make it work in our crazy, busy life.

I gave each child one night of the week to stay up late with me.  For fifteen minutes after bedtime, we did whatever that child chose to do.  We made cookies or snuggled into my bed and read a book.  We took walks in the neighborhood.  We learned to draw.  We made up leprechaun stories.

Making cookies

Making cookies with Micah

We made memories. 

It sounds so precious but the truth of it is, it was hard.  After attending to my children all day, I found it almost painful to give them even fifteen minutes of my attention.  It was a sacrifice, an intentional sacrifice, to spend time with my kids one-on-one at the end of the day.

The only reason I didn’t give it up is because Stay Up Late Nights are one of the best things we ever built into our family culture.  What started out as a way to meet my children’s needs for individuality turned into an answer to my unknown need to know them individually and to enjoy their uniqueness without distraction.

Stay Up Late Nights gave me that.  It’s been years now since we started and most weeks, my children would say that their night–their Stay Up Late Night–was the highlight of their week.

It is the highlight of my week too because I need it.  I need to remember that being the mother of five children is indeed hard.

But being the mother to Faith, Jonathan, Kya, Micah, and Paul is one of the best things in the world. 

Playing horses

Playing horses (and arachnids) with Paul

Parenting 46 Comments

An Interruption

Kissing mothers, Kindred Grace

I am interrupting your regularly scheduled 31 Days installment to let you know that today, I’m sharing over at Kindred Grace.  I am talking about a book a friend gave me that changed my view of parenting.  Actually, it changed my view of myself as a parent, because if we are being honest here, and I hope you’ve come to expect that by now, I’ve never felt very good about the kind of mother I am.

I knew I was an introvert, but I couldn’t help feeling guilty when, by the end of the day, I just wanted them to be somewhere other than in my space.  I felt so drained by the day-in and day-out with my own children, even though I loved and enjoyed them, that engaging other relationships was very difficult.  I felt I didn’t have anything left for anyone else. 

Even going to church was challenging.  I had to wrangle children for three hours straight and still reach out to others.  Family events and large group gatherings pushed me to the brink of panic.  I felt overloaded with faces and snippets of conversation and the ever-present concern about where my children were at that very moment.  I felt like motherhood was making me more an introvert than ever, and I felt incredibly guilty about it.

What was going on?  You’ll have to jump over to my friends at Kindred Grace to find out.  I hope you will.  They’ll have a cozy chair waiting just for you.

Don’t worry–I’ll be back with Day 5 of our 31 Days series, From Enemy to Heir, a bit later.  So grab a cup of coffee and go visiting.  I think you’ll be glad for this little interruption.

 

 

 

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My House: A War Zone

War Zone

It is 8:42 pm, and my house looks like a bomb went off.  Inside-out and mismatched socks litter the living room floor, library books sprawl lazily across the couches, and thirty-two fingerprinty water glasses gather for a conference on the kitchen counters.  The dishwasher needs filling and the laundry needs folding and five sets of teeth need to be inspected before they are sent off to bed.

When the last child has asked the last question before finally acquiescing to bedtime, I stand in my living room in a state of shell-shocked exhaustion, assessing the damages.  Every surface of my home looks like it has suffered a direct hit, and I feel responsible, as if my home wouldn’t look so much like Ground Zero if I was just…better at this.

I didn’t keep up very well today.  The house looks like a war zone, I sigh.

It looks like a war zone because it is a war zone. 

The words crowd out my thoughts before I can stop them.  It is a war zone, and you are at war.

I gasp, because I have forgotten.  In my self-criticizing, I have forgotten all that I have done today to raise up a mighty little army and to equip them for battle.  Now, at the end of the day, my house reflects the effort that has gone in to the more important task of preparing my children for war.

It’s just that it doesn’t seem like war when I hold my children on my lap and sit with them at their desks and serve them at the table.  But it is.  I do not like to look into their sweet, innocent little faces and think that they are engaged in a battle for their souls.  But they are.  I do not like to think that our enemy will stoop so low as to rob the cradle.  But he does.

War Zone

It is a war, and I must spend my days pouring truth into my babies, demonstrating love, and fighting against sin—both mine and theirs—because I only get one chance to arm them well.  Already the enemy is noticing weaknesses, looking for chinks, and hoping I’m too busy cleaning the kitchen to notice them myself.

But I know that one day, they’ll have to face him alone.  One day, I won’t be there to gird them up.  So every day, we’re hauling out the armor, messing with swords, and building up defenses.

It makes an awful mess of the living room. 

But then, war isn’t pretty.  It is messy and exhausting.  It requires so much focus, dedication, and perseverance that other things simply cannot get done.  We don’t always have time to put the tanks back where we found them because we are just too busy keeping them loaded.

War Zone

Some days, it’s all we can do to make sure everyone makes it out alive.

If my house looks like a war zone on those days, then let it be.  Those are shields and swords littering the living room floor, not sippy cups and Nerf guns.  This is a battleground, and I am raising an army. 

Today, it just happens to look like it.

 

100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood, #?  I have so lost track of numbers.  

100 Days of Motherhood 15 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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