Parents want to work from home for good. But for moms, the effects could be dire. Caroline Kitchener, The Washington Post April 30, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 2 1of2Chan Téi DuRant is one of many parents reevaluating their priorities while working from home.photo for The Washington Post by Alyssa Schukar.Show MoreShow Less 2of2Loren Arcaria, a single mother, outside of her home in Farmingdale, N.Y.photo for The Washington Post by Johnny Milano.Show MoreShow Less WASHINGTON - The hour between 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. used to be Chan Téi DuRant's least favorite hour of the day. Within minutes of leaving her D.C. office, she would be in bumper-to-bumper traffic, inching along the interstate as she stared at the clock, picturing her 9-year-old daughter alone on the playground with the only teacher who hadn't gone home for the day. By the time she arrived at her daughter's school, 25 miles away, DuRant, a single mom, was frustrated and exhausted. She would already be dreading the frenzied sequence of tasks that awaited them: homework, dinner, shower, lay out tomorrow's clothes, brush teeth, bed.