Comshaw
VAGITARIAN
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2000
- Posts
- 12,007
Each contest's requirements are so broad, so open-ended it puzzles me as to how you see them as so restrictive. Take "Summer Lovin'" for example. The only requirement is that it be in the summer. The contest requirements aren't any more restrictive than the site rules in general. Actually, I think they are less restrictive than the standard site rules.For me, it’s the dichotomy between the comps being rather restrictive - like Nude Day is only really going to appeal to E/V writers - and also writing for them seems like the main way to get lasting exposure.
Sure you could treat them like a writing exercise, but is that going to lead to a story you put your heart and soul into? I’m not going to write a novella on a theme I have little interest in. I suspect it’s the same for others.
Soemone asked about what’s the alternative? I’d say four comps a year with no restrictions on theme. Greater flexibility and still the scope for exposure.
I take it as a challenge to write the story I want to and still remain within the parameters of the requirements. Call it an exercise in adaptability. I think of it like this: I point my imagination in a direction and tell it, "You have to stay twixt those guard rails. Now go find me something out of the ordinary." For we it's more than a writing exercise, it's a life lesson.
One of the masters of that mindset was Smoky Yunick. He was a NASCAR legend. He did things like acid dipping the frame and bodies of his race cars to significantly reduce the weight. The regulations specified the capacity of a fuel tank. So he used a 4" diameter fuel line to give his cars a few more gallons of fuel. A huge advantage over the competition.
It may not seem like what was done to a race car can equate to writing in a contest. The actual act no, it's more about the mindset. "What can I do to push the boundaries of the rules and still stay within the legal confines of those rules?" That's the way innovation happens, be it a stock car or an erotic story.
Comshaw