Say It Plainly Challenge Winners

A behind-the-scenes glimpse at the Vocal Curation Team’s top picks from Say It Plainly.

By Vocal Curation TeamPublished 7 minutes ago 2 min read

A pattern showed up pretty quickly reading this shortlist: these poems don’t circle what they’re about. They just say it.

That makes for some tough, raw reads. Miscarriage, infidelity, chronic pain, money, addiction, fear for someone you love. Not much is softened or dressed up. By the end, I felt like I needed a cigarette, and I don’t even smoke.

That’s the tradeoff with this prompt. Without metaphor, there’s nowhere to hide. These poems rely on clarity and plain statement to carry the weight. Some stay controlled and measured, others are more blunt, but all of them commit to naming what’s there and staying with it.

The pieces below reflect that range.

🏆 Winners

a thread of quiet rage by Heather Hubler

Heather Hubler speaks plainly about feeling stuck, naming fear, numbness, and a growing anger at herself for staying there. The piece relies on direct statements and questions, letting that tension sit without dressing it up.

Expected to Continue by Cali Loria

Cali Loria names miscarriage and early sexualization without sidestepping the details, letting plain, sequential language do the emotional work; the poem’s restraint puts the facts and expectations front and center, so that nothing is softened for the reader or for the speaker.

I've Never Been Afraid by A. J. Schoenfeld

A. J. Schoenfeld walks through spiders, snakes, and flying in direct, matter-of-fact terms before turning to a present fear that can’t be controlled. Keeping everything plainly stated and letting that shift land without embellishment.

Decomposition in Progress by Tim Carmichael

Tim Carmichael lays out the oak’s decomposition through detailed observation, from bark to roots to fungi. The poem stays plain and exact, even pausing to reject metaphor and keep the focus on what's physically occurring.

Get Out by Marilyn Glover

Marilyn Glover lays out the betrayal in direct terms, then shifts into clear and immediate commands to get out; staying on the surface and letting that refusal carry the weight.

🎖️ Runners-up

🏅 Honorable Mentions

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Vocal Curation Team

Collaborative, conscious, and committed to content. We're rounding up the best that the Vocal network has to offer.

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Comments (2)

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  • Lana V Lynx4 minutes ago

    Congratulations to all!

  • Ian Vince4 minutes ago

    Congrats to all the winners 🥳

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