It’s Competition Time!
Win an easy fiverr
By Cathy (Christine Acheini) Ben-Ameh.Published 8 months ago • Updated 8 months ago • 1 min read

- It’s Competition Time!
Here is your chance to be one of five lucky writers to win a fiverr to be my muse.
Leave your entries in the comments below. You can enter as many topics as you think of.
Now, here’s the challenge:
I’m giving away 5 , $5 tips to readers who can do one thing:
Tell me one original topic you’d love to read me write about — something you’ve searched for, something that’s been gnawing at your curiosity, something you haven’t found anywhere else.
That’s it.
The five most compelling, original ideas win.
Ready? Take it away.
Ends June 3, 2025
Results: June 4, 2025
About the Creator
Cathy (Christine Acheini) Ben-Ameh.
https://linktr.ee/cathybenameh
Passionate blogger sharing insights on lifestyle, music and personal growth.
⭐Shortlisted on The Creative Future Writers Awards 2025.




Comments (10)
Congratulations Matthew Fromm, Dalma Ubitz, Kendall Defoe, Carolina Borges and Tim Carmichael 😄👍🏾. Thank you everyone for submitting your brilliant ideas.
I would love to see you throw a proverbial dart at a map and write a poem about wherever it lands!
Here’s one: “What if grief isn’t something we carry, but something that carries us—into places we’d never go on our own?” I’d love to read your take on that. Maybe as an essay, maybe as a poem. Maybe both. Explore the idea of grief not as a burden but as a vehicle—how it pulls us into new versions of ourselves, how it shows us truths we weren’t ready for. What doors has it opened? What ruins has it made beautiful? What identities has it excavated? Most people write about surviving grief. I want to see what it taught you while it had the wheel.
Your favorite Vocalist...of all time!
I’d love to read your take on: 'The Unspoken Hierarchy of Immigrant Stories - Why Some Narratives Go Viral While Others Get Ignored.' As someone who writes candidly about multicultural experiences, you’re uniquely positioned to explore why certain stories (like ‘exotic’ love stories or ‘model minority’ tropes) dominate mainstream media, while others (like working-class struggles or queer immigrant experiences) rarely get the same spotlight. What makes one narrative ‘palatable’ versus ‘too complex’ for audiences? I’ve searched for this analysis everywhere, but most articles either glorify ‘diversity’ or reduce it to trauma porn, but never examine the systematic cherry-picking of these stories. Your blend of personal storytelling and social awareness could make this both eye-opening and deeply human.
Descriptions of the restaurants that are long gone, but you remember and crave their food
Ok, I used to do these many years back, where I asked people to give me five words and a subject to create a poem from. I want you to write a villanelle about The Venus De Milo , here is my article on how I write a villanelle: https://shopping-feedback.today/writers/to-write-a-villanelle%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="css-w4qknv-Replies">
I will add it to the May Challenge Story list and you will have mine soon
The memories of childhood places that no longer exist, seen through an unsatisfied older adult's eyes.
What happens to the version of you that only existed in someone else’s eyes?