defaux
May contain traces of purple
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I participate in the contests regularly - in fact, I deliberately do so at every opportunity, both here and over on dotcom. For me, it forms part of my discipline. Between the two I get 2 short stories and 2 flash pieces (plus the 4th, and an occasional attempt at poetry or whatever else might be going on.) That means it pushes me to output roughly one piece of fiction per week. = Habit, deadlines, exercising the writing muscles regularly. Like marathon training, I ran 5k every day, and gradually worked my way up, not just going out to run 42k cold.
I enjoy the challenge of the prompts, particularly when it pushes me into something that I wouldn't choose. It encourages me to try to create inspiration from the ether, rather than simply waiting (hoping) for it to strike. I often combine the contest prompts with a personal growth challenge from my own coaching process, like try this one in a different POV, or a new genre or whatever, to stretch the skills into something I haven't yet attempted. Sometimes I discover things I unexpectedly like.
It is a low stakes environment that allows me to try out new and different things (characters, genres, styles, voice, etc.) on an unsuspecting audience (sorry, not sorry) without concern for them not working out. It's an avenue for learning and growth. I really enjoy reading everyone's interpretations of the prompt, seeing how they have composed their ideas, and what they have done better than I - then asking myself, how can I do this differently, better, next time?
And yes, it builds the portfolio. I now have some 30 odd stories written over the past 6 months, of which the best may be selected for submitting to publication (a goal for this year). All of this is my self-prescribed pathway towards completing and hopefully one day publishing the novel which is responsible for getting me started. I also have at least a couple more concepts for novels that derive from short pieces I wrote, and possible world building texture or context where I might fit some of this ideas together or within an existing novel concept. So it is all progression, of a kind. At least I hope it is.
And let's not forget the bling. Winning is certainly nice validation, but a lot of the time I'm happy to receive a single vote as evidence that I have not completely failed. Of course there are many talented writers competing, and it's actually validating just to be in the same company. Not being abjectly laughed out of the club does something passively positive for my impostor syndrome.
Oh and @Homer Potvin I concur. I don't see anyone having an issue if you wished to participate.
I enjoy the challenge of the prompts, particularly when it pushes me into something that I wouldn't choose. It encourages me to try to create inspiration from the ether, rather than simply waiting (hoping) for it to strike. I often combine the contest prompts with a personal growth challenge from my own coaching process, like try this one in a different POV, or a new genre or whatever, to stretch the skills into something I haven't yet attempted. Sometimes I discover things I unexpectedly like.
It is a low stakes environment that allows me to try out new and different things (characters, genres, styles, voice, etc.) on an unsuspecting audience (sorry, not sorry) without concern for them not working out. It's an avenue for learning and growth. I really enjoy reading everyone's interpretations of the prompt, seeing how they have composed their ideas, and what they have done better than I - then asking myself, how can I do this differently, better, next time?
And yes, it builds the portfolio. I now have some 30 odd stories written over the past 6 months, of which the best may be selected for submitting to publication (a goal for this year). All of this is my self-prescribed pathway towards completing and hopefully one day publishing the novel which is responsible for getting me started. I also have at least a couple more concepts for novels that derive from short pieces I wrote, and possible world building texture or context where I might fit some of this ideas together or within an existing novel concept. So it is all progression, of a kind. At least I hope it is.
And let's not forget the bling. Winning is certainly nice validation, but a lot of the time I'm happy to receive a single vote as evidence that I have not completely failed. Of course there are many talented writers competing, and it's actually validating just to be in the same company. Not being abjectly laughed out of the club does something passively positive for my impostor syndrome.
Oh and @Homer Potvin I concur. I don't see anyone having an issue if you wished to participate.