[4] She married fellow teacher Gunnar Fromen and returned to New York,[5] where she was teaching Spanish classes in 1926[6] at such institutions as the Curtis Superior School and Hunter College High School in New York City.
[5] In 1930, Molina was appointed by President José María Moncada as the Nicaraguan delegate to the Inter-American Commission of Women.
[3] The purpose of the delegation was to compile a report indicating how laws in the various countries of the Americas effected women's nationality.
[10] Molina was unable to attend the 1933 Montevideo Convention, because once again her government provided no funds; however, both she and her husband had contributed information on the laws of Nicaragua pertaining to women.
She underwent two appendix operations and had a mental break due to severe postpartum depression, which was revealed in a letter to Doris Stevens from Gunnar.