This is a letter to Dr. Laura from one of her fans:
Hi! My sister Molly and I are HUGE fans of yours. We both quit our  careers to stay home and raise our kids and we have really appreciated  your support along the way! I wanted to share with you a short article  my sister wrote for a local Sacramento blog on the topic... Hope you  enjoy!  - Ashley
From the Capitol to the Rabbit Hole
By Molly DeFrank
A few months ago, I made a pretty radical career move.
I turned down an offer to nearly double my old salary. Instead, I opted  for a job with no salary at all. A job with no benefits, no vacation  days and terrible hours.
I am a stay-at-home mom.
The average itinerary of a stay-at-home mom looks something like this:  wake up to chatty toddler and crying infant. Nurse infant. Cross fingers  that toddler is entertained by Barney episode until nursing is  complete. Unsuccessfully burp infant while preparing breakfast for  toddler. Burn toast while cleaning spit-up off your shirt. Rummage for  clean shirt for self and infant. Reassure whiny toddler that breakfast  will be ready soon. Change mom shirt and infant onesie. Burn second  piece of toast. Forget the toast. I hate toast. Pour cereal. Awkwardly  guide infant's bow-legs through Exersaucer leg holes so you can secure  toddler in high chair. Pour milk into cereal bowl. Turn around for .3  seconds to grab spoon. Fail to intercept cereal bowl before it hits the  floor, courtesy of overeager toddler hands. Reassure crying toddler that  accidents happen. Clean mess, pour new bowl of cereal. Hope kids can  entertain themselves for 20 seconds so you can microwave your coffee for  the 3rd time that morning - and wonder why they haven't invented an iv  coffee kit yet.
And that's just the first 15 minutes of the day. Every. Single. Day.
I've actually always wanted to be a stay-at-home mom. Ever since I can  remember, I have pictured my adult self in head-to-toe June Cleaver  garb, seamlessly balancing playgroup, cleaning and baking. My pearls  would lay neatly above the neckline of my flowy summer dress as I hung  laundry on the clothesline outside. The children would run around  laughing and blowing bubbles and I'd be living in a 1950s Tide  commercial. It would be awesome.
But here I am, a dozen years and two kids later, feeling like I deserve a  medal if I've managed to have us all showered and dressed before 9am.  Our clean laundry sits in baskets throughout the house, old, wrinkled,  waiting desperately for June Cleaver.
I've never had a job that has kept me so continuously busy and yet  provided such little evidence of having worked non-stop (see laundry  piles).
In case you are currently working full-time and want to know how your  life might be different if you decide to make this radical leap, here  are some ways I have noticed that stay-at-home-mom-ing differs from  working in an office full-time:
When people ask you what you do for a living, do they sound interested  or impressed when you tell them? Yes? Ok, now imagine the opposite  reaction of that, and then an awkward "Good for you!" that sounds  exactly the same as when your 3rd grade PE teacher congratulated you for  finishing the mile run 10 minutes later than everyone else in your  class.
Do you currently feel a tremendous sense of gratification when you  complete a work assignment well? Do the people you work for give you a  pat on the back when you do the right thing? In your new position, when  you do the right thing, like refuse to allow your toddler to drink  windex, your good deed will be met with lots and lots of yelling. Right  in your face.
Imagine having a college roommate who was drunk all the time. She spills  snacks and drinks all over the place. She leaves her stuff everywhere.  She is emotionally unstable, laughing hysterically at things that aren't  funny (like, I don't know, say, a giant purple dinosaur on television?)  and then, 10 seconds later, crying over things that aren't sad (like  when you run out of Cheerios). This is your life with a toddler.
In your current job, do you find that random passers-by critique your  work methods and tell you how to do it better? Stay-at-home moms get  lots of free advice from people everywhere: at the grocery store, in the  mall, in the waiting room at the doctor's office. Sometimes strangers  even stare at you with disapproving frowns instead of verbalizing their  suggestions while your child throws a tantrum in the market because you  won't open the giant bag of m&ms.
Does your existing job allow you to use the ladies room without bringing  along your entourage? Do you currently realize at 11am you still  haven't had a chance to empty your bladder since you woke up? This will  happen. Every day.
The actual experience of parenting my children all day, every single day  is exhausting and difficult. It is, hands down, the hardest, craziest,  most unpredictable and thankless job I have ever had. But each day is  interspersed with indescribably magical moments. Like when my 21-month  old tries to count to ten. ("one, dooo, vree, four, eeet, seven, eeet,  seven, eeet...") Or when my 6 month-old laughs uncontrollably at his  sister's dance moves. Or when my daughter hears my stomach growl and  says, "Airplane!"
This job makes me feel wonderful, awful, exasperated, fulfilled,  heart-broken, panicked and thankful. Sometimes all in the same day.  Sometimes all within an hour. Parenting full-time is better - and harder  - than I ever could have imagined it would be. Despite the qualitative  differences between pay-checks and poopy diapers, I can say with  confidence I have one of the most difficult professions in the world.
And I wouldn't have it any other way.
Molly recently traded in her suits and heels for jeans and TOMS and moved to the 'burbs. She spends her days chasing after her 21 month-old daughter, Selah, and 6 month old son, Jack. A former press aide to Governor Schwarzenegger and Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner, DeFrank now spends less time putting spin into the news cycle, and more time putting laundry into the spin cycle.
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