Wow. I've learned from this thread that if/when I have kids, I'll be the perfect mother.
You see, I work full time...from home. So I've got the income/personal fulfilment side and the be-there-for-my-child every-waking-and-napping-moment locked.
Ummm yeah. Big fat

right there. Ain't none of us have a "lock" on this parenting thing. I'm sure when the time comes and I have to find a part-time in home sitter to come so I can actually work while at home (my company is fussy about telecomuters actually working during business hours, company policy states we must have child care arrangements), I'll get an ear-full from the DIS parental police telling me that I should quit my 45k + fabulous benifits job so I don't need a stranger raising my child (never mind I'm in the next room) or that I should find a job outside the home so I'm fulfilled in my job and raise independant kids that aren't dependant on mommy being around (cuz ya know I'm right there in the next room). Or some other senario I haven't thought of, I'm sure.
My mother was a SAHM for my brothers, but at age 2 I had racked up so much in hospital bills that my mom HAD to work to pay them off. So I went to an in-home daycare for a few years before kindergarten and was then in the same day care in the afternoons once I was in K. The in home caregiver was okay, she left the older kids play in the basement while she sat upstairs with the babies and watched her soaps (Days of our Lives, I can still remember the theme music playing!). She didn't interact with us unless someone started to cry/scream. But that was fine with us, we liked playing with each other and didn't really want/need an adult around (at least I didn't and if the other kids felt so, it wan't obvious. No one cried for mommy - or daddy- that I ever saw).
So, my older brothers had the benift of a dedicated SAHM and I got "dumped" in daycare. All three of us are happy, normal, adjusted adults. So I say that daycare vs. SAHP makes no real difference, it's the quality of parenting that takes place and not the quanity (and no, Mrs. N
didn't raise me, my mom and dad did). I have very clear memories starting at about age three and I never felt that I missed not having my mom around durring the day. Mom and Dad went to work, my brothers went to school and I went to Mrs. N's house. We all got home and had dinner together and spent time together as a family until bedtime. On the weekends my brothers and Dad would do Cub/Boy Scouts and mom and I would do stuff together. Sundays we went to Mass. Rinse repeat. By the time I reached 1st grade the medical bills were paid off, but by then my mom say the benifits of having a 2nd income. That 2nd income allowed us to do a lot of things (including a WDW trip) and allowed my parents to retire early. Which was a good thing because Mom died at age 62. Had my parents not retired early they wouldn't have been able to spend the last 10 years of their lives actually, you know, together.
But that's what worked for US, and this is what will work for DH and I when the time comes. What works for us may not work for you, and I don't presume to judge anyone else, and no one has the right to judge me and mine.
The vast majority of the replies on this thread, and I've read all 14 pages, has said the same. To each their own and can't we all just get along? For those that think one parent needs to be at home full time or why bother...
....I just say thbbbbbbbbbbbt!