Writers logo

Trusting Your Gut in Writing Competitions

Why intuition may be your most reliable writing partner.

By Paul StewartPublished 5 months ago 3 min read
Trusting Your Gut in Writing Competitions
Photo by Mert Talay on Unsplash

When entering writing competitions, your gut often knows the story better than you do. That's been my experience taking part in a few competitions outside of Vocal - and it's a lesson worth sharing.

The First Challenge

Last year, I entered the NYC Midnight 250+ Word Microfiction Challenge. The genre I was given was Ghost Story, the action "surrendering," and the word "remind" that had to be featured in the story somewhere.

Although I love horror, I find ghost stories hit or miss, so I was already feeling nervous. But I had paid to enter and wasn't about to back down. With only 48 hours to write the story, I decided pretty quickly that I couldn't write a story with big scares or elaborate reveals in such a short word count. Instead, I wrote a quieter, more emotionally-driven ghost story told in first person - the style I always fall back on when I'm struggling.

In my piece, I explored childhood trauma and a fractured parent-child relationship. Curiously, although I wrote the protagonist as a girl in my head, many of the judges for the competition assumed it was a boy. I love the ambiguity, but it was a great reminder of just how much readers bring their own perspective to a story.

After sharpening it with rereads and edits, I submitted the story. I wasn't thrilled with the results, but wasn't unhappy either. When the results eventually came back, I didn't progress further, but the judges praised the concept and the emotional beats. Overall, I enjoyed the experience and was motivated to try it again.

Here is a link to the story:

Round Two: Comedy Come to the Reef

When the NYC Midnight Flash Fiction Challenge was announced, I jumped at it. This time, I was assigned Comedy as the genre, and given an assigned item "fake fingernail(s)" and assigned location "coral reef". Fortunately, the target word count was 1,000 words or less, so there was a lot more room to develop a stronger story arc.

Comedy can be a difficult genre to work with - highly subjective, very slippery, and hard to nail (yes, the pun is intended). Within a short space of time, and the clock ticking down from 48 hours to zero, I quickly devised a wild idea: a decorator crab finds a fake fingernail and battles a painted frogfish, set at the Great Barrier Reef. I did some research. Yes, those creatures do live there, and yes, sometimes, fake nails survive underwater.

I felt I was in a good place.

The first draft was a little flat and dull. It didn't feel nearly peppy or funny enough. So, I leaned into the chaos, added more absurdity and energy, along with more Die Hard references, because why not? It's one of my favourite films.

I submitted it and felt confident.

Then I waited for the results to come in. I didn't advance, but I did earn an Honorable Mention. The feedback from the judges pointed out various improvements that could be made to make the story better, but also praised the story as unique, fun, and very off-the-wall - exactly what I had aimed for.

Here is a link to the story:

The Takeaway

These two challenges taught me a simple lesson - trust your gut. When I wrote that ghost story, I second-guessed a lot of the decisions I made, and the results reflected that.

When I followed my instincts with the second attempt, the story had spark and garnered some positive attention, even if it didn't help me progress in the challenge.

Competitions are unpredictable. Judges will differ, genres will change, and often the prompts can feel impossible. But your intuition — that gut instinct you develop over time — is the one constant you can rely on. It can tell you when a draft feels a little flat, when it's time to turn up the crazy, and when your story is full of life.

So, whether you are entering Vocal challenges, outside contests, or submitting to publications - listen to your gut. It may not guarantee a win for you, but it will always guide you to produce your best work.

*

Thanks for reading!

Some other things you might enjoy include:

AchievementsAdviceChallengeGuidesInspirationProcessPromptsPublishingWriting ExerciseResources

About the Creator

Paul Stewart

Award-Winning Writer, Poet, Scottish-Italian, Subversive.

The Accidental Poet - Poetry Collection out now!

Streams and Scratches in My Mind coming soon!

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  2. Expert insights and opinions

    Arguments were carefully researched and presented

  3. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  1. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  2. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

Add your insights

Comments (17)

Sign in to comment
  • Stephen A. Roddewig5 months ago

    Having just canceled my V+ renewal, it seems fitting that I helped cement your 3rd Place Leaderboard ranking with some of the last comments/replies I made before becoming a second-class citizen 🤝

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your Leaderboard placement! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Test5 months ago

    I relate to this so hard Paul. It's such a hard lesson to learn but once you yield to it, there's just so much relief!! Congrats on taking third in this week's leaderboard!!

  • JBaz5 months ago

    I liked your Yippee ...Mother Crustacean story when I read it before I will now read your tale of horror Congratulations on the leaderboard.

  • S. A. Crawford5 months ago

    I think this is a really good point; when we trust our gut we usually end up being more authentic and thats what really makes us stand out!

  • Krysha Thayer5 months ago

    I haven't thought about trying outside contests yet but I think I should. It might be fun at the very least (and challenging) but it would also be good experience. Congrats on the honorable mention and good luck in any future contests you choose to enter!

  • Hahahahahahahaha I'll never forget the ribbed for her pleasure. That story was hilarious! Y'know what? I too thought that it was a boy! And I guess this is why I don't like first person. I mean, I have nothing against those who use/prefer that. It's just not my cup of tea. Mainly because I don't deal well with uncertainties. Lole gender for example. I don't to be thinking it's a a boy only for it to be revealed that it's a girl, and vice versa. But that is if their name has never been mentioned. That's another thing that rubs me the wrong way because like doesn't the MC have a name? I don't know, maybe I'm just wired differently 😅😅

  • Sandy Gillman5 months ago

    I enjoyed reading this breakdown of your competition experiences! The reminder to trust your gut really resonated with me, I’m always second guessing myself.

  • Andrea Corwin 5 months ago

    and…the winner is: So, whether you are entering Vocal challenges, outside contests, or submitting to publications - listen to your gut. It may not guarantee a win for you, but it will always guide you to produce your best work. That is great advice and thanks!! The fact is that judges will always vary, it is quite subjective based on their likes and we can only do our best.

  • D. J. Reddall5 months ago

    Sage advice, offered with your characteristic candor and wit, my liege. I have had some modest success as a participant in various challenges on Vocal, but I haven't ventured beyond this small world as yet. I'm afraid I am still a mediocre analyst and interpreter of literature dabbling in the creation of it, but this article has made me think I ought to be bolder. Much obliged!

  • L.C. Schäfer5 months ago

    I don't believe I am anywhere near good enough to give NYC challenges another go. Maybe one day. That's what my gut is telling me.

  • Great advice Paul-- it seems that my wins for top story have followed exactly the premise you suggest works. Loved your crustacean story by the way...quirky and clever!

  • Matthew J. Fromm5 months ago

    Hit the nail on the head. Practice, practice, practice so when the time comes, you don’t even have to think about it. Trust your own judgment and jump in head first

  • Kendall Defoe 5 months ago

    This is probably the best advice I've seen on this page...next to mine, of course. Well done, sir!

  • John Cox5 months ago

    Great article and good on you for braving the deep seas beyond Vocal! Congrats on your honorable mention! Great work!

  • The best lessons are learned from experience, and you've already picked up a good one. So there's nothing else to it but to keep going! And good on you for going through the feedback and taking it into account. A lot of writers struggle with that (me)

  • Imola Tóth5 months ago

    Wait, how do you know that the judges thought the story was about a boy? And how do they give feedback? I never received one. Or did I? Someone once left a weird comment and I kinda told them off... ewww.

Find us on social media

Miscellaneous links

  • Explore
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Support

© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.