The Great Writing Challenge: Daphne vs. Peter

Image courtesy of pixabay.com

Daphne Cooper is a long-time friend, dating back to our days at the University of Cape Town Mountain and Ski Club. She is also an accomplished fellow writer. Seven or eight years ago she challenged me to a private writing contest. It’s been going on ever since.

This is how the challenge works:

Every few weeks or months, as the mood takes us, one of us – taking turns – will propose a title out of the blue. The challenge is for both of us to write a story based on that title. Any length, any genre, no holds barred, as long as the written piece reflects the given title. Usually we each respond with short stories, but two of my books grew out of Daphne’s challenges. And Daphne has twice entered one of her resulting short stories in more public writing contests.

When Daphne first launched her challenge, I thought it was because of a fit of competitiveness. She said no, it was to motivate both of us to write more. Hmm.

I make the challenge and its rules sound easy, but of course, the one who just announced the title has an unfair advantage. He or she already has an idea of what they want to write. The other one, the muggins on the receiving end of the title, almost always shouts, “AAAAAArggh. Where did you get such an impossible title? That is just the STUPIDEST title I’ve ever heard. How can anyone write about THAT!”

Still, until now, we’ve always managed to do the impossible and BOTH of us have always come up with something. Sometimes we knock up a response in a few hours, sometimes it takes weeks. In the seven or eight years of the challenge, I estimate we’ve churned out about 35 stories each. It’s been interesting to see just how varied our approaches have been and how they’ve changed over time.

My observation is that Daphne’s earliest responses featured lots of blood, gore, trauma and tragedy – perhaps because of her professional life. Now that she’s a grandmother, though, her writing has become much gentler.

Anyhow, we thought some of you might be interested in an actual example of one of the challenges and how we responded to the same title in such totally different ways.

This was a title I dropped on us both in late 2024:

Image from pexels.com contributor, Pitipat Usanakornkul

Daphne’s piece is first up, highlighted in pink, and mine follows highlighted in blue. We’re not looking for readers to pick a winner or a loser, but to enjoy both pieces, enjoy how different our approaches are, and leave us plenty of comments below.

If you want to see more of these challenge stories in this blog, please also let us know – we might even consider taking challenge titles you suggest. Enjoy!


© Daphne Cooper, 2024.


And now …

Image by pexels.com contributor, Pitipat Usanakornkul

© Peter Staadecker, 2024

At night, after I’ve put Sandra and the twins to bed, I rinse dishes and talk to Tasha. Talk at the after-supper dishes has been our habit since day one of our marriage, and I’m not stopping just because Tasha’s dead. Almost 14 months now, but after all the years together, I can fill in her side of the conversation pretty well. A sort of post-mortem telepathy.

“The twins,” I say, “The twins went to Judy’s sixth birthday party, over at Erin and Brian’s.”

“Simon and Kate each had a card and present to give Judy?”

“All taken care of, Tasha. All under control.”

She snorts. “Except?”

“What except?”

“Except?”

“Well, OK. Simon gave Judy a haircut. It wasn’t great. Brian laughed, but Erin was furious.”

“Why didn’t Erin supervise them? Or Brian?”

“That’s what I told Erin. Made her even madder.”

“Hmm.”

“She wanted me to pay for a remedial haircut for Judy at her very chi-chi hair stylist. I said, no, but said I could give Judy a remedial haircut here at our place.”

Tasha is laughing. “What else.”

“You guessed there was more?”

“I can tell.”

“Well, they all ate too much cake, and Kate threw up on Erin’s carpet.”

“Oh.”

“Fun news, though … pass me the glass bowl…”

“Yes?”

“Because they were so stuffed … we had too much chicken at dinner, too much even to freeze after.”

“Chicken?”

“Yup. Sandra helped me cook it. So anyway, we had leftovers, and the twins said to give it to Ic.”

I stop talking, because Sandra is wondering downstairs for a last glass of water. She doesn’t like it when she catches me talking to Tasha. She’s very grown up for eleven. She thinks it’s weird that I still talk to Tasha. Tells me I have to accept and move on. Says if she can accept her mom’s death, I should be able to also.

Anyway.

Ic is Icarus Cat. The kitten who jumped too high and then crashed. As I was trying to tell Tasha, there we were feeding chicken to Ic that night. Party night for Ic. Real chicken instead of dried cat food.”

He stuck his face into the bowl like a scuba diver and didn’t resurface until the bowl was sparkling clean. When he finally came up for air, his eyes were glazed. Blissed out on a chicken high. He flopped down and fell asleep right by his bowl. One paw resting on the bowl. “Don’t nobody take my bowl.”

The kids were entranced.

“Wow.”

“Did you see that, Dad?”

“Ic the vacuum cleaner.”

 “Ic the black hole of chickens.”

“What a pig.”

“Don’t call him a pig.”

“Pig.”

“I’ll punch you if you call him a pig.”

“Simon, Kate. Enough. Go get washed for bed. Nobody punches anyone or calls anyone a pig. He’s just enjoying real chicken for the first time. Like you tasting party cake for the first time. Be happy for him.”

“Party cake with icing.”

“And candles and sprinkles.”

“And throw-up.”

“Right. Be happy for him. Sandra—bath night.”

And that was that, or so I thought.

After Sandra returns upstairs with her glass of water, Tasha says, “Hmm” with great skepticism, and won’t tell me why.

I find out the next day.

Monday morning: Sandra’s time to feed Ic. “Dad, he won’t eat his dry food.”

“Is he sick?”

“I think he wants chicken.”

“Ignore him. He’ll eat his food when he’s hungry.”

Monday night—from Simon: “Dad, Ic hasn’t eaten his breakfast. He wants chicken.”

Tuesday morning—from Kate: “Dad, you have to cook chicken for Ic. He’s not eating.”

Tuesday night from all the kids: “Dad, you have to cook chicken for Ic. And for us. He’s going to starve.”

Me: “I’m not going to let that overfed, over-entitled, chicken-pig dictate what we cook and eat.”

Kate: “Don’t call him a pig.”

Simon: “He’s not a pig.”

Sandra: “You’re the pig, Dad. You’re going to let him starve. We’re going on strike for Ic.”

God knows why their school has to teach eleven-year-olds about labour negotiations and strikes, but Wednesday morning the twins announce a go-slow when it’s time to dress for school (put up to it by Sandra of course). I drive them to school in pajamas.

Tasha is not happy with me.

 “Don’t worry,” I tell her, “leave it to me.”

When I pick up the kids after school, the principal wants a word with me.

“Please sit, Mr. Grayson.”

I sit.

“I want to say again, Mr. Grayson, how sorry we all are about Tasha.”

“Thank you.”

“I know that bringing up three girls on your own must be difficult. Mr. Grayson. The school has a woman; she’s a social worker, a lovely woman and very personable, whom you might like to meet …”

“Principal,” I say, “that’s kind of you. But no matter how lovely your friend is, I’ve no intention of dating right now. It’s far too soon.”

The principal looks confused. She hesitates and then says, “Well, it was really the twins coming in pajamas this morning that made me think …”

“What?” I say to her. “The entire school had a fun pajama day last month. I’m just continuing on that tradition. The kids loved it.”

I leave while she’s still struggling to get around that.

Tasha will have a fit of giggles when I tell her about it over dishes. Before dishes that night, though, there are a reporter and a photographer at my door wanting pictures of Ic, the cat. Bloody Sandra! Standard negotiation tactics: get the press on her side and vilify the opposition.

“We have no cat,” I say to them, “just an overfed, over-privileged, pig and three overfed children.”

“Can I quote you, Mr. Grayson?”

“You can quote Götz von Berlichingen, for all I care,” I tell them, adding a touch of erudition to this undignified circus. “Now get out.”

“Who’s Götz von Whatever?” says Sandra.

“He was part of a German Peasants’ Revolt in the 1500s, and told the other side where they could stick their demands.”

On Thursday morning the kids are dressed on time but giggling. There are signs on the lawn in their handwriting: “Dad unfair to cat!” and “Chicken for Ic!!” and “Honk if you support Ic!!”

Several neighbours drive by, honking like lunatics.

There is the same newspaper photographer lurking on the sidewalk with his lens pressed against our hedge. I pretend not to see him.

Erin—Judy’s mother if you remember—the one who wants me to pay for a remedial haircut for Judy—is walking their beagle past our hedge and sticks her tongue out at me. I wave my hand at her, real friendly for the sake of the photographer, except I’m making snip-snip scissor movements with my fingers.

After I drop the kids off at school, the photographer is still there. I turn on the in-ground sprinkler system to water the hedge. Then I have a coffee with Tasha.

“I’m not letting a cat get the better of me.”

 Tasha is unusually unsympathetic to my case.

“Get it sorted, or I’m going on strike too,” she says.

“You’ve been talking to Sandra!”

“Just get it sorted.”

“God help me when Sandra becomes a teen,” I tell her.

When I pick up the kids at school, the principal wants another word with me.

“Sandra has taken to telling pupils and teachers they can kiss her behind. Where do you suppose she picks up such language, Mr. Grayson?”

“Either in the school yard…”

“No, Mr. Grayson, our students do not use such language.”

“… or she’s been studying Renaissance history.”

“History, Mr. Grayson?”

“Sandra is a keen student, as you’re no doubt aware, Principal. Her curiosity takes her far beyond the standard school curriculum. ‘Kiss my ass’ may seem like common parlance today, but it was a phrase first made famous by Iron-Hand Goetz, during the German Peasants’ Revolt of 1524 …”

“Iron-Hand?” Once again, the principal seems confused by where our conversation is going.

I’d like to tell her to focus, but I’m polite:

“Oh, yes, Principal,” I say instead. “He lost his lower arm during a military campaign in 1504 and had an iron prosthesis made that could hold a shield.”

Before she can lose focus again, I continue.

“I’m sure you and the school must feel very proud to have a young scholar like Sandra in your ranks. In my own way, I try to encourage her academic curiosity, as I’m sure you and your staff do, Principal. Thank you for calling me in to tell me how proud you are of her. It means a lot to me.”

That night I gather the kids around the supper table. Chicken dinner.

“OK kids, here’s what we’re going to do. Management has agreed to your demands to feed Ic chicken from now on, if that’s what he wants, but there have to be concessions from the labour force too.”

The kids aren’t sure whether to cheer or not.

“What concessions?”

“Since chicken is more expensive than regular cat food, there will have to be wage concessions from the workers.”

“Wage concessions?”

“15c each off of Simon and Kate’s weekly allowances, and 25c off Sandra’s weekly allowance. Or the deal’s off.”

There is some squabbling, but in the end they agree. Everyone is happy, pretty much. Especially Ic. And over dishes that night Tasha says to me, “Nicely done.”

“I know,” I say modestly. “Pass the water jug please.”


Image from pixabay.com contributor ArtTower.

And now over to you, the reader. Thoughts? Comments? Observations? Cutting critiques or deafening applause? Requests for more? Be sure to let us know in the comments section below.

4 Replies to “The Great Writing Challenge: Daphne vs. Peter”

  1. I love this challenge. What enjoyable stories to read – thank you! I can just see Daphne’s cat enjoying the comfort of her (cat’s) house, but alas no big garden. And then Peter’s story – love the cat Ic (or does that stand for In Charge?) But your website verification process – I have to click on a picture of a dog!

    1. So pleased you enjoyed them. As for the verification process, beyond my control unfortunately, but oh my: you got a DOG! ROFL.

  2. I think you two gifted authors are totally priceless! Undiscovered talent…till now! High time a book came out of this, perhaps the ‘Daph & Pete Challenge’…but clearly you could both come up with a way better title. Look fwd! Xx

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