“When I look at my life and its secret colours, I feel like bursting into tears.”
― Albert Camus
Art by Edward Okuń.

Also published at Quora.
“When I look at my life and its secret colours, I feel like bursting into tears.”
― Albert Camus
Art by Edward Okuń.

Also published at Quora.
“We are a country in which words matter, and words can change minds.” – Ken Burns
Here are my 5 copywriting rules. Written in isolation in between blog posts, poetry, product descriptions and SEO auditing.
1. Write the way you talk to your best friend, but in a consistent way. “Copy is a direct conversation with the consumer.” – Shirley Polykoff
2. Start with the truest sentence that you know. (That is Hemingway, not me.)
If written well, all stories are true. Be authentic and play with your imagination, which will arrange words in different shapes to fill the truest contours of the shortest sentences that you can write. Each line should play off of each other.
3. Strive for balance in your writing. If you feel that your story lacks poise, shape it with the right words. Play with it, and when finished, read it aloud. Your ear will pick up the irregularities you cannot see on paper. I always read and record my poems before publishing. That’s how I spot unpolished lines.
3. Simplicity. First line, second line. The goal of your first line of copy is to get people to read the second line. The goal of your second line is to get them to write the third, etc. Everything you write must be copy. Even if you are writing an ordinary email or a request for an offer.
4. Your copy is about the reader, not about you. It’s OK to write in the first person. That’s how people talk. Nevertheless, in the eyes of the reader, “You” is more powerful than “I”. Who’s “I” and why should I care? I, the reader, care about myself and not about you, the writer.
5. Fill your copy with real-life examples of yourself and your work. Let people know you’re real. Take screenshots of tweets, blog posts, and articles published. They will boost any email, blog post, or landing page.
“A great story is true. Not necessarily because it’s factual, but because it’s consistent and authentic. Consumers are too good at sniffing out inconsistencies for a marketer to get away with a story that’s just slapped on.” – from Seth
No matter what you sell or do, do it right and well. Even if you don’t sell gold, leave an impression and a mark. Get the job done. If possible, leave a trail of delight that will later lead them back to you. And whatever you do, ask a simple question: Can I get away with it? Can I get away with my story, presentation, or performance? We are all non/artists until we promise ourselves to put our passions into practise and become entrepreneurs.
“Art is what you can get away with.”– Andy Warhol
Excerpt from Get Away with Entrepreneurship written in 2016.
Iulia Halatz
Duy Huynh

Blue Insights has published my latest poem, Knifed.
Enjoy reading!
https://medium.com/blueinsight
I am honored and humbled to be part of the Medium publications!
I aim at dreams
knife them
as trophies on my wall.
I can always
take one down,
quench the thirst
of a turbulent wound
with
tainted endearment
from the poisoned well
We dug and drained
under the wing of
One night.
I’m in love
with a stabbed dream.
Under my skin
Rumors of thyself
move clouds upon the moon…
Art by Gertrude Abercrombie.

About Iulia Halatz
“We should take power and strength from our stories.” Her published poems can be found in The Sudden Denouement Anthology Volume I.
“On Sundays the world is as bright and empty as a balloon.”
– Joseph Roth, The Hotel Years, 1919-1939
“When the going gets tough, the art gets going. That’s the beautiful thing about human creativity – it can sprout in any soil. Especially for the late British-French illustrator Edmund Dulac, whose flair for Art Nouveau fantasy not only gave us brilliant literary illustrations, but flights of fancy and escape during the First and Second World War.”

I am humbled and honored to have joined a another Medium publication, Blue Insights which now has a space on Quora.
https://www.quora.com/q/blueinsights
Enjoy reading!

Encaptured
Written by Iulia Halatz
https://medium.com/intricate-intimacies/encaptured-d4b93de9fefa
Her skin is like fire
her breath, distant desire
Flowers meet
for their annual feast
any time you kiss
her meatiness white…
Her hair comes from the stars
a supernova dust
it shines and coils
and transports
all of you
in a magic land…
Where seas are soft and wild
Winds blow
Of unknown stories
That paint and burn
Sounds
On your skin
That rekindle
Every time
She moves in sight…
Art by Julia Gabrielov.

“Between history and myth, set against a definite time and place and soaring up towards timeless heights to express eternal truths of the spirit and its works, The Ballad of the Argesh Monastery or of Master Manole is endowed with that strange and fruitful ambiguity of the great creations handed down to us by the ancient world.”
– Zoe Dumitrescu Bușulenga (Translated by Dan Duțescu)
“What a dream I dreamed
In my sleep! Meseemed
A whisper from high,
A voice from the sky,
Told me verily
That whatever we
In daytime have wrought
Shall nights come to naught…”
I illustrate with Félix Vallotton, Church of the Hurlus in ruins,1917

Also posted on Quora.com.
Song of Spring
written for the Sudden Denouement Anthology Volume I
Spring is a princess
without voice
only fingers
to mix colors
in the rainbows.
She’s got a vessel
for the softest fragrance
pressed in archives
in the Library of Scent…
There are plums
the cherries
and the blooms of vines
escalating
on the earth’s shelves…
Anyone who writes down
to Spring
is simply wasting
a leaf of scent.
No one is ever so poor
as not to write up
music
to all the shades of Spring
and to the dancing stars
to give a gift
of chaos…
© Iulia Halatz
…By the time I began reading the final third of the Anthology, I wished for respite from the unearthing of discontent and the unforgiving barrage of reality, even as it was sometimes cloaked in fantastical imagery. And a partial reprieve came in the form of odes to the seasons: “The Marigold of months has sure begun./Fling back the shutters and let down your Hair…” (Lois Linkens’ “the Yellow month”) and Spring has “a vessel/for the softest fragrance” (Iulia Halatz’s “Song of Spring”). – Mariah Voutilainen
“We spend way too much time trying to be perfect… But nobody buys ‘perfect’. What they buy is a relatable story.” – Shanda Sumpter
View the full article at Entrepreneur.com.

Art by Rolf Armstrong.