I think I had three weeks to write the paper.

I did it in three days. That included all the research and absolutely no sleep.

There was no surprise when Mr. Livernois walked through the classroom and handed graded papers back. I had an A- marked at the top of mine. But the “Hey, Campos…that minus wouldn’t be there if you’d started it four days ago” comment he tossed out with a grin as he strolled by my desk? Yeah, that one wiped the fuzz from my brain and resulted in a telling blush that spread across my cheeks, proving to Mr. Livernois that yes, I had waited until the last minute.

Again.

My entire life has been a search for the next deadline rush. It’s how I kinda graduated high school and sailed through college and scored honors with that degree of mine after perfecting the art of procrastination. Three months to write a 30 page paper on religion for a class in which said paper is the only grade? Bring it on. I nailed that bad boy in a weekend flat and got a shiny A for my efforts.

It’s a rush. It’s my drug. It’s why I went into journalism and loved having editors breathing down my neck and why I found my sanity again with blogging and self-imposed deadlines after leaving the job to stay home and raise Buttercup. Gimme a deadline. Any deadline. I’ll wait until the last damn minute and churn out gold. Maybe it’s the adrenaline junkie in me, but going at the pace of Normal People only leaves me deleting everything I had to begin with and starting over at the last minute anyway, so I eventually cut out the middle man and just started rockin’ the Procrastination Party like it was going out of style.

And it’s worked for me. In every aspect of my life.

So why, oh why, did I expect the writing of Baby F(Ph)at to be any different? Why did I honestly think that I would give 100 percent of my efforts to the act of TRYING at the start of my journey? And why was I surprised when I woke up with a renewed devotion to Finding My Waistline and Ditching the Muffin Top yesterday? With 30 days left on my self-imposed The End for my book?

Granted, I pretty much screwed the pooch on attaining any kind of stellar losses in the home stretch. I could have, should have, didn’t…and now I’m giving it all I’ve got because that’s the way I work.

When I wake up in the morning, it’s all about The Plan and The Workouts and The Countdown.

Not because it makes for entertaining reading since my life is a perfect Point and Laugh montage of hilarity, but because it’s a deadline…and I’m about to see if I can keep that perfect record.

Let’s pretend I’m famous and you give a damn about the craziness that is my life. Let’s pretend that just like Jon and Kate, Brangelina, and that perpetually-sad-eyed Kristen Stewart, you want to know what I ate for breakfast (Kashi cereal), what the label says in my clothes (Target, I think), and what my daughter’s latest accomplishment was (she poo-poo’d in the potty all by herself today!

So are we pretending? Are we in line at the grocery store with nothing better to do than grab the latest trashy tabloid with mystery cellulite splashed unceremoniously across the cover and getting ready to open it up to see if we can match the unidentified, highly-magnified belly pooches, thunder thighs, and fatty arm wings?

We are?

Good. Now let’s pretend that before we can make it to page 6 to play the fat-celebs match game, our limited attention spans are caught by the tell-all interview with the totally famous, uber-awesome author behind the New York Times best selling “Baby Ph(f)at” series, Pauline M. Campos. (Because the line you are in at the grocery store is actually a worm hole and you’vPicture 539e stepped a few years into the future. Just go with me on this one.)

Here’s everything you never wanted to know. And then some.

Pauline M. Campos is every bit the epitomy of motherhood today. She’s overworked, under appreciated, and wondering why she left the work force because even though she felt the same way there, at least a pay check was attached to the daily attack on her ego and self-esteem.

While one would expect a lit star of her status to show up for an interview covered in class, Ms. C is instead covered in what appears to be dried mac and cheese noodles on her yoga pants and a splash of what can only hope is chocolate pudding on her T-shirt.

But who are we, the Trashiest and Most Brainless of them all, to judge a mother who begged to get herself in the public eye with her tell-it-like-it-is momoir about her struggle with losing the baby weight long after it’s socially acceptable? Instead, we invite you to read on and judge for yourself.

Trashy, Brainless Mag: It was hard to peg you down for an interview, Ms. Campos! Have you been busy promoting your new book?

Ms. C: Hell no. I spent my advance before the book even got on the bookshelves and can’t afford a nanny to watch my toddler while I traverse the country spreading my literary wit. Instead, I’m home and dodging the meals my daughter throws at me. It’s her way of saying she would have preferred Whatever I Didn’t Put On Her Plate instead.

TBM: Ahhh, explains the, um, choice in apparel today.

Ms. C: Go ahead and say I look like shit. I know I do. It’s a wonder I made it here with anything on at all since 90 percent of my laundry is dirty. I got this little ensemble off of the miniscule clean pile of clothes on my bedroom floor. Or, at least I think it was the clean pile.

TBM: *Clearing throat.* Okay then. So tell me about your book, “Baby Ph(f)at: Adventures in Motherhood, Weight Loss, and Trying to Stay Sane.” It launched you into literary stardom, after all, and a cult classic gift for new moms.

Ms. C: It’s my answer to every mother who has ever been surprised that they were in for more than they expected after giving birth. We all have that friend, that sister, or that co-worker who gained 15 pounds during pregnancy and walked out of the hospital wearing their size 4′s. Before motherhood, we assumed we would become that friend; after motherhood, we secretly hate that friend.

We have to stop looking outside of ourselves for the secret that will work for us. You know, the one that will help us lose weight, find a good balance, learn how to prioritize, find the exercise program or activity that we will gladly do day after day, help us not go clinically insane the next time the kids start fighting over who looked at who first and the husband gets pissy when we ask if he can take the kids for an hour so we can go for a little walk for some much-needed alone time. We have to look inside of ourselves for our own “zen” hidden in all the craziness.

Baby Ph(f)at” is my answer to that. Your peek into my life and my fight to beat the mom pudge and regain my MILF status. I swear, I tell it like it is, and I can laugh at myself. If that sentence didn’t speak to you, then don’t buy the book and then bitch about the “F-bombs” peppered throughout the book on the Amazon reviews, for Pete’s Sake.

TBM: What’s an average day like for a mommy lit star as yourself?

Ms. C: As you can see (gesturing at her food-splattered clothing) it’s not exactly glamorous. My mom lives with me, so I sleep till 10 if I stayed up late writing the night before, and she takes care of Buttercup. Then I putz around in my mismatched old T-shirt and yoga pants I sleep in (and no, I’m not wearing what I went to bed in last night. I swear.) and get The Husband’s lunch box together while cooking us all a big meal for lunch before he leaves for the afternoon shift.

If life is good and Buttercup is not teething, crabby, or thinks the moons are misaligned, then I can get dressed before he leaves and walk Buttercup out to wave her Daddy off to work. The rest of the day is a cluster-bleep of housecleaning, laundry, sweeping up enough dog hair off of the floor to put together a new one, and trying to keep an active toddler occupied before she goes to bed at 6:45 p.m.

TBM: So from 7 p.m. on then, you have time to work on your writing?

Ms. C: That’s cute. No. Not exactly. Buttercup has always slept with me or a family member so bed time requires one of us, usually me, to lay down with her until she passes out. If I’m lucky, that’s 15 minutes. If she wants to torture me, it’s more like two hours.

TBM: So you write then?

Ms. C: Nope…then I have to sweep the floor again (living in the desert can suck sometimes) and mop, clean the kitchen, and motivate myself to work out so I can not look like hell.

TBM: So you write then?

Ms. C: Only if I have made sure I paid the bills, balanced the checkbook, showered, made sure The Husband’s crap is ready for the next day, and gotten Buttercup’s diaper bag ready for her morning gymnastic sessions.

TBM: I’m almost afraid to ask…

Ms. C: Yeah, i write then. And that’s why I’m up till 3 a.m. It’s a vicious circle. Glamorous, isn’t it?

TBM: So how exactly did you have time to write the book to begin with?

Ms. C: Lots of coffee. All-nighters. And a very understanding and helpful mother.

TBM: Sounds like you barely have time to think, let alone promote yourself. How’d you land the book deal? How do you stay connected with your readers?

Ms. C: My super-awesome agent found me by way of this blog. It was luck and prayers answered and dreams coming true…for my agent, I mean. I’m pretty happy with how it all turned out, too, though. As for my readers? The women I write for are just as crazed and busy as I am. They don’t have the time to drop the kid at the sitters so they can come see me wax poetic at a coffee shop 45 minutes away from them. But they do have time, between loads of laundry, husband’s that can’t dress themselves, and kids screeching “MAMA!” every other second, to stop by my blog, read an entry, and realize they are not the only ones who never feel like they have it all together.

TBM: So last question…what’d you spend the book advance on?

Ms. C: Shoes. And therapy. But mostly shoes.

A friend recently read some of my work in progress and made my day telling me she was sure it was publishable. I was praised for my honesty, my willingness to share, my voice, and my sarcasm. All in all, it was my favorite phone call ever, because my writer’s ego was purring the whole time.

The only hiccup in the conversation was this: in between praise for my literary wit and her laughter (in the right places, thank God) as we went over my manuscript, she asked me the question I’ve pretty much been avoiding since I started this whole creative mess.

“So what does your family think about it?

Blink. Blink. “Wha-huh?”

“Your family…have you shown them anything you’ve written yet?”

“Um, well…not exactly.”

Which brings me directly to this blog post. And to the Internet. And to the strangers reading this post. And to those who’ve read the intro to Baby Ph(f)at and..and..

Well, you get the picture. My family, however, does not.

It’s not that I don’t want to share with them. But somehow, it’s easier to admit to a blank computer screen and a keyboard that I weigh 228 pounds and send it out to the world as part of a work in progress in an effort to connect with moms in my situation than it is to admit to anyone I know personally.

Take last night for example. I was working out with my new Wii Active and setting up my profile with my height and weight and all that jazz. When it came time to add The Number, The Husband automatically put his hands over his eyes and waited for me to tell him that the coast was clear.

And yet, I’m slapping it up on the Internet for everyone and their brother to see.

Right.  About that…

I’m taking the lead of many other far more experienced writers out there and putting a bit of my work out there for you to see every now and then.

Right now, I’m working on a couple of different projects including a memoir which I have tentatively titled, “Baby Ph(f)at: Adventures in Motherhood, Weight Loss, and Trying to Stay Sane.” I’m trying to get moms to email me or tweet me (@aspiringmama everybody!) with little blurbs about their own experiences with struggling to lose the baby weight long past the time it’s acceptable to use said baby as the excuse. So I posted the following on the private online moms group I have belonged to since I was about four months pregnant, and then I decided I liked the blurb enough to use as an intro in the book.

Posted to private mom group

by Me

August 2, 2009

I want a funny, honest, snarky read for moms who can relate to the truth. While there are a few lucky ones, the rest of us are not walking out of the hospital in our pre-pregnancy jeans. More likely, we are leaving the maternity ward looking like we still belong there.

“When are you due” ask kind strangers as they reach for our still swollen bellies. Maybe our children are with daddy or perhaps we have left them with the sitter for some much needed “Me” time. Either way, there is no outward evidence to match up with the baby belly we are sporting.
We raise an eyebrow, defensive. Where the hell does this asshole get off?

“I’m not pregnant.” we respond stiffly. “In fact, I gave birth six months ago.”

Or maybe it was six years. In any case, our bodies were irrevocably changed the moment we crossed into that once foreign land known as “Motherhood.” The world no longer revolves around us. Our needs are not foremost in our minds. The roles of wife and mother (what baby/toddler/child/teenager needs) now comes first. Who has time to devote to a regular workout schedule when trying to juggle diaper changes, play dates, laundry, soccer games, parent/teacher conferences, and that precious little thing called sanity?

But…well…there are those who are living proof that it can be done. And to be perfectly blunt, think it needs to be done. I’m not saying to let the kids go feral and start hunting the neighborhood in packs to secure their own chow in order for Mommy to get a few precious moments to herself for some power yoga and a nice skim latte, but it is necessary to refocus our lives in order to keep ourselves somewhere at the top of that all important “to-do” list. Because if we lose ourselves in the effort to be all that we can be to our kids, what are we really giving them?

So here it is, ladies. My journey to the Pudge and Back. My efforts to get in shape, set a good example for my daughter, and hopefully lessen my chances of a shitty pregnancy the next time around since I plan on being a few pounds lighter. My life: For your enjoyment. Feel free to point and laugh. I probably would be too if this wasn’t me.

It’s time to get busy and find my body; the one I lost when I pushed a baby out and let myself go to hell. Just let me change this diaper first.

X-posted at Bad Mommy Blogger

You know what sucks? The fact that I can’t write my memoir, Baby Ph(f)at: Adventures in Motherhood, Weight Loss, and Trying to Say Sane, any faster than I lose the weight.

So either I hire a personal trainer to kick my ass, or I have to learn the art of patience.

*tapping fingers on desk*

Yep, personal trainer it is…wait…they cost money and I haven’t sold the book yet.

Is this what educated-types call a “conundrum?”

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