It’s been freakin’ cold here this week, cold and wet and generally miserable. Upshot, we’re running fireplace a lot and the flannel sheets are snugly on the bed. Sleeping on a cold night is so much more tolerable when you’re sleeping on flannel.
I think we may finally be getting a handle on this sleep situation. The breakthrough – if that’s what it is – came about earlier this week after a particularly bad night of restless leg syndrome, tossing and turning, irritable skulking to the uncomfortably mushy guest room bed and yet another rough night of broken sleep for both of us. We’d both had enough of this crap and got to talking hard about solving the problem once and for all. And then I made a mental connection to a client project I did over Thanksgiving week.
One of my regular clients is a company that produces expansion joints for large industrial boiler systems; I’ve recently been researching and writing reams of material on steel bellows, how they’re made, what they do and why they’re necessary. That took me into topics like thermal expansions and how multi-ply steel construction impacts joint elasticity.. and about how steel springs (which is basically what a metal expansion joint is made of) can conduct unwanted vibrations over ductwork. Basically, when you buy an expansion joint, you want one that will not transmit vibrations, absorbing them instead of passing them on to connected components.
And then it hit me: vibration isolation. Steel springs. Vibration isolation. Twitchy feet. Mattress springs. VIBRATION ISOLATION!!
Manic research ensued.
It’s the damned mattress! I nicknamed it the Oak Slab not long after I first came here. It’s very firm – hard, actually – and takes some practice to get comfortable sleeping on. And it transmits vibrations like we’re sleeping on a snare drum. Every move, every turn, every twitch, every time the cat shifts position.. you feel it across the whole bed. We’ve known for a long time that we need a king size bed. Now we also know that we need one with a high enough coil count to absorb movement stresses and vibration. And we need to start shopping for it SOON.
It’s bizarre sometimes, when client work dovetails with regular life like that. But I’m not complaining.
