 Come put your clothes on. I usually start my day at 5.30. How do you put off your shoes on? You can take your new play-doh. Come on. And I take my shower, get my stuff together, make sure my bags are packed. We grab the kids, we grab the food at the refrigerator, get loaded up in the car, and we start our day. So I usually typically leave the house by 7.00, 7.15 to get going to work. When I looked for daycare providers, I was looking for somewhere near my job. So in case of an emergency, my kids would be closer to me to get to them. To charge somebody $300 a week for one child, I just think it's ridiculous. You won't excellent care, but you don't want to have to choose between food and take your senior child to daycare. Nothing? You hungry? That's when I start to look for licensed quality providers that would have small home daycare that were more family-oriented. I'm paying childcare for my youngest two. And I have two in college full-time that I have to pay for because they don't get enough financial aid. So I have to help them pay for that because I just cannot let them live their dream of getting an education. I looked into the COUNTS program and I found I didn't qualify. You have to work a certain amount of hours in order to be qualified. You can't make over a certain amount. Usually I pay half or a little over half, which is a great opportunity for working parents. It just didn't benefit me because I'm over the income qualifications. So most families are two-income family. So the option of staying at home with my infant, it wasn't an option for me. And it's not an option for a lot of parents. Unless they're going to change the laws with my job and still cover me and pay me FMLA, till I stay at home with my child at least two. That'd be different, but that's going to change those laws. We still struggle somewhat to get daycare paid, but we manage and we maintain because they have to go to daycare because I have to go to work. Well, I'm finally at work. And I get through this all over again starting at 5.30. For me, the struggle is real and it's something I live every week.