I am Dracula. I bid you welcome.
Dracula (1931)

You are a wise man, Van Helsing, for one who has lived only one lifetime…
Dracula (1931) (Bela Lugosi)

Donovan - Season Of The Witch



Do you know what is it to be a lover? To be half of a whole?
Christopher Nolan (via hellanne)

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Before we go any further, I wanted to tell you—just this once—that I am an unreliable narrator. I am made of dust and shadows. I am telling you things now, and I will tell you more things. You will never know my secret heart. You will think you hold it in your hand, that you know the depths of me. And you know nothing. You will never know me. And I never wanted you to. That’s not why we’re here. That’s not why we ever came here to this place. And you should know the truth: That there are no reliable narrators.
The Orient Express (Or, the Value of Failure), June 22

the case for the ampersand

i have been reunited with my love of punctuation, specifically the ampersand…although we have not been kept apart & we reunite daily through simple meanderings in texts & postcards, newsletters & to-do notes on my hand, there is something about the coming of the falling of leaves & the sweet ampersand.

reminds me of old school notes & e.e. cummings books read on blankets. holds a place in my heart alongside decapitalization of the word i.

some examples of phrases to express my honeyed love for the character & its use in pairs: 

  • peas & carrots
  • this & that
  • half & half
  • mac & cheese
  • here & there
  • chips & queso
  • he & she
  • peanut butter & jelly
  • slow & steady
  • ready & waiting
  • hugs & kisses
  • you & me
  • love & tortillas…

xo

I have begun my own quiet war. Simple. Sure. I am one who leaves the table like a man, without putting back the chair or picking up the plate.

-From the House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros

News Column: Corn Surge Expected to Raise Food Prices

Aug 21, 2012

Harold Brubaker and Jeff Gelles

corn prices

Southwest Philadelphia resident Mona West has a simple strategy for combating rising food prices.

“I buy less,” she said.

West’s friend, Gail Glenn, of Pine Hill, N.J., has a different approach: “Just stomach it. You have to eat.”

The two reacted recently to the prospect of higher food prices next year because of the severe drought searing the Midwest grain belt.

The forecast for this year’s harvest of U.S. field corn - not the sort bought at farm stands to eat off the cob - is down 27 percent from earlier this season because of weather that has scorched more of the nation’s farmland than any other drought in the last 50 years, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The drought is not affecting produce markets - the corn humans consume - because such crops are either irrigated or in areas of the country that are not suffering from the heat and lack of rain.

Anticipating an imminent shortage of the grain that is integral to the production of meat, milk and eggs - and, increasingly, fuel because of the ethanol mandate for gasoline - traders have sent the price of corn surging as much as 50 percent this summer.

Worries about rising prices for food and fuel at a time when individual income growth is weak could be trouble for the U.S. economy, which has failed to hit its stride. The drought could also be a wild card in the presidential election.

The USDA predicted last month that overall food prices would rise 3 percent to 4 percent next year. At the high end, that is not much more than the 3.7 percent increase last year, but one expert didn’t expect that benign forecast to stand when the USDA updates the prediction later this month.

“They are probably going to revise that up,” said Robert Pierson, chairman of the food science, nutrition and management department at Delaware Valley College in Doylestown, Pa. “My guess is 6 percent,” he said.

If Pierson is right, the average U.S. household with children could see its food bill increase about $11 a week, based on data provided by Moody’s Analytics in West Chester.

The estimated weekly increase since 2010 is $23, or 13 percent.

The projected increase does not account for shoppers’ tendency to trim where they can.

Glenn, for example, said she makes some items, such as cornbread, that she used to buy. For meats, she aims to get more for your money by buying large quantities and freezing it, Glenn said.

Philadelphia resident Duane Nelson was quick to say he eats out less and switches to lower-cost items. “Chicken is cheaper than beef,” he said.

Unfortunately for Nelson, chicken is likely to be the first of the meats to increase in price because of higher prices for corn in chicken feed and the quick production cycle for chickens.

“It only takes 49 days to raise a chicken,” said James Dunn, an agricultural economist at Pennsylvania State University.

That is why the USDA has predicted a bigger increase in the price of chicken this year than next. Chicken breasts that cost $4.59 per pound now could cost $4.77 per pound a year from now.

Beef prices, which are more volatile than food prices overall, will likely go down before they go up because farmers are finding it too expensive to feed some animals.

“Dairy animals are being slaughtered because the cows aren’t really making any money for the farmers. That’s pushing beef onto the market right now,” Dunn said.

When the price of corn and other agricultural commodities rise, the greatest impact is on meat, dairy, and eggs because the cost of feed is a major component of their retail prices, Dunn said.

By contrast, only 3 percent of the retail price of bread is from wheat.

Pressure from corn shortages may buoy gasoline prices in the future, but there is little evidence they are to blame in this summer’s spike in fuel costs: more than 25 cents per gallon nationally in the past month, AAA says.

Prices at the pump are driven by a complex mix of factors. Mideast tensions, stricter sanctions on Iran, a Chevron refinery fire in California, and production outages in the North Sea and the Midwest may all play a role. So does seasonal demand during the summer vacation.

But prices are also affected by speculation in oil futures, which can magnify short-term swings. And experts such as Drexel University’s Shawkat Hammoudeh say speculation has been fueled by the Federal Reserve’s aggressive efforts to increase the money supply.

Eugene A. Guilford Jr., president of the Independent Connecticut Petroleum Association, said speculation is probably the largest single factor in the recent spike, which he said has added about 61 cents per gallon to the commodity price of gasoline since late June.

Guilford said less than half that increase was linked to rising crude-oil prices. Nor is U.S. demand a likely culprit, since consumption so far this year is down more than 4 percent compared with the same period in 2011. And the commodity price is for “plain vanilla gasoline,” so its price does not reflect the cost of ethanol, he said.

For now, the U.S. Energy Information Administration foresees mostly modest, short-term swings in gasoline prices, projecting gasoline prices to average $3.53 per gallon for 2012, and $3.33 per gallon in 2013.

But Guilford said wholesale gasoline prices have lagged the commodity-price increase.

“We may be in for some more retail price increases,” he said.

Source: (c)2012 The Philadelphia Inquirer Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service.

madly in love with & amazed with my recent etsy purchase. vintage drum majorette tasseled leather-soled cowgirl boots & under $40. <3

madly in love with & amazed with my recent etsy purchase. vintage drum majorette tasseled leather-soled cowgirl boots & under $40. <3

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