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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Here We Go!

" We're gonna take it on down the track (...) pack the boxes, load the truck, just another place for us to try our luck. Where the weather is fine and the folks are nice (...) if you never try it you never know, you gotta stretch if you wanna grow, keep a lookout for our letters from the road, yeah here we go (...) we ain't afraid of facing the what ifs and I don't knows, so let's do it, let's raise our glasses high and toast to west coast searching that we do, because you never know until you try.
So here we go. Called everyone and said goodbye and how we gave this old town a try (...) so I guess it's time for the big 180 me and my boy and my foxy lady, she looked at me and I looked at her and I said I know, so here we go. Ain't no worries what's a little back and forth (...) ain't no hurry for us to settle down, before we die we want to try it all and have ourselves a little look around, from town to town. So here we go..."
The above words are on quotation because believe it or not I did not write them. They are actually the lyrics to a song, that by now, has become the closest my husband and I have ever had to "our song".
We moved to this beautiful small town less than two months ago.
We have since decided to move closer to San Francisco for my lovely husband to take the job that was offered to him a few weeks ago.
 Today, I will start packing the boxes, and Monday and Tuesday we are driving down to the East Bay to look for a new home.  Again.
  I am having a hard time being as mindful through this move as I was through our previous. We had decided to leave Boston two weeks before we left, and I spent everyday of those two weeks, and of the week that followed while we drove the truck west, meditating on what we wanted from this town for our lives. 
What kind of house we were hoping to find, what type of jobs I was hoping to find, and what kind of life we wanted to create for ourselves in this community.
 It seems as if I worked so hard on it, that I actually made it happen.  "Putting it out there" is one thing. But taking the time and the energy to actively search for it, to think about it with enough presence to manifest it, and taking the appropriate steps that will lead you in that direction, are another.
 I was grateful to my practice for providing me with the tools I needed to accomplish this task.  I was grateful to my husband for always being supportive and grateful himself.  I was grateful to myself for utilizing those tools and for staying calm, trusting and present.
Now I find myself taking on this second move (second this year, in my adult life, this will actually be my twelfth) in some sort of auto-pilot mode.
 Spend a couple of hours a day on craigslist. Save the possible homes to our favorites. Email the agents showing to schedule a viewing...
It's almost as if because I have done it so many times , and because I just did it, this whole "moving" thing is embedded in my cells.  It's a natural response, like walking, or opening my eyes when I wake up.  I just do it.
However, I realized today, that it won't work out as well unless I get off auto and start thinking of what I am doing.
  I should take the time to realize that this time around, we got exactly what we wanted from the components that we searched for ourselves (meaning our home, its location, my jobs) because we were mindful in our path. 
We were accepting instead of resistant. We were trusting and patient, even if, as you all very well know, I had to work very hard on those two.  We were tranquil, and we didn't let it get to us.
So I think today, instead of starting to pack, I'm gonna reset my mind, body and spirit.
This is a separate move.  It is just the fact of the matter.  This is not something to be done in auto pilot, this is something to live through.
So let me start actively putting it out there again.  What do we want from this new adventure? And what do we need to do to get it?
What do we want in a home? What would the dream home be?  Look for it, with trust, patience, and courage.
Have some fun with it.  Sit outside under our beautiful tree that we will be leaving behind soon and use the laptop to search there instead of on the couch.  Have a glass of wine, after all, we still live in wine country.
If we made it happen this time around, we can surely do it again.  But we have to trust, we have to believe, and we have to relax.  We have to wake up every day and find the energy within us to put it out there again, with the same active determination as we did before.
So I'm gonna make myself a "Caliente Sunrise", one of my husband's cocktails, and put on some music and  meditate on everything that we want from this new town, and this new page on our book.
 A friend once told me, that maybe the reason why I was destined to move around so much (and this was in the middle of my 3rd move I think!) was to make friends all over the world, and influence their lives as I always let them influence mine. It sounded so romantic, yet so exhausting. Twelve and counting, but don't have enough fingers (not even counting the "foot fingers") to count all of those friends I've made.  Maybe she was right, and this is my path.
Or maybe Patrick and Paul were right, and I'm just a fucking gypsy.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

When it rains, it pours!

 About three weeks ago, the gentleman who was doing most of the remodeling in our home, and then our neighbor's unit, used the expression "When it rains it pours" to describe the fact that after days of no work in our house, all of a sudden there were three different people here at the same time, working on three different projects.
  He is a very nice man, quiet and hardworking, yet pleasant and smiley.  It was always nice to see him around here (although uncle Mark felt I really did need to get a job when I told him how nice it was to chat with my friend Pat, the handyman). 
  In my quest to patience and waiting to find the right job(s) I started thinking a lot about that expression.  On several occasions, I actually thought " I hope that it will pour.  I hope that right now I can't find any employment because eventually I will have so many options I won't know what to do."
''Careful what you wish for" my grandma always used to say to me.
Here I find myself today, a storm of possibilities ravaging my thoughts.  When I wished for this, I had no idea how much it was actually going to rain...
  Last Saturday I went in for a second interview at a busy local restaurant.  I had a great time, the people who worked there seemed very nice, and it is an institution here in Sonoma, so getting a job there ensures some security.  Later that day, my former  Yoga teachers (the ones that ran the teacher training program I completeded) invited me to their Yoga retreat house here in town, and offered me a job with them.  It is rather ideal, except for the fact that my hours depend entirely on their trainings.  If they have an ongoing training, I will be working a good amount of hours.  If they don't, I will be working just a few.  The pay per hour is generous, and the work environment is beautiful and peaceful.
 Yesterday,  I started training at a local yoga studio to work the desk.  As in most studios, you trade your time at work for classes, workshops and other goods.  The manager is a wonderful woman, and just being around her for a few hours made me realize this was going to be a great thing for me.  Get my foot in the door, meet like minded people in our new community,  gain my confidence in teaching, perfect.
 After that, I went for an interview at the local Whole Foods.  For those of you who don't know, I have been wanting to work at Whole Foods for quite a while now.  I love food, I love alternatives when it comes to food, and I really want to learn how the retail side of food works.  What does it take to run a market like that?
 I interviewed with two different people, the store manager and the Produce team leader, and both went well.  They will contact me at the end of the week with an answer, and I left feeling hopeful and grateful.
 As I was leaving, I checked my phone and noticed I had a message from a local number I wasn't familiar with. It was the manager at the restaurant I interviewed on Saturday, asking me to call her back to figure out a schedule for me to start working with them.
 I rode my bike home rather fast.   I was hungry, and my mind was going a million miles an hour.  Should I turn down the position at the busy restaurant because it's not what I want? It seems like I have a pattern of responsability that makes me always take the jobs at the "best restaurant in town" and then I find mysef miserable in them.
 Should I risk it with the part time at the Yoga retreat house and hope that I get the part time position at Whole Foods?  When we decided to move here I put it out in the universe that I wanted to work part time in food and part time in Yoga. Hello?! Kinda' seems as if that is what I would be getting out of this deal!
 After getting home and having lunch with my husband while we discussed these options, I found myself a little overwhelmed and unsettled.  I went for a walk, I spoke to my parents, but still felt rattled.  So I went to our spare room, lit a candle, lit some incense, and practiced yoga and meditation for a while.  I found my peace, and was ready to sit in our yard and hang out with my man.
 I checked my phone  (it doesn't ring, so I check it on a semi regular basis to see if anyone has called) and found a message from my former boss. He never leaves me messages. I played it and heard his serious voice telling me that he had a "work related question for me".  I called him back, he didn't answer.  He called me back, and luckily the phone was still in my hand so I saw it coming in and picked up.
 Somehow that man has the strange power to change my life with just a few words.  He cares a lot about us, and he is generous in showing it, but this was way more rain than I had asked for.
 The work related question was more directed towards my husband than it was towards me.  One of the bartenders  at a very busy dowtown restaurant in San Francisco (where my husband has wanted to work for a while) is leaving, and before he set out to look for a replacement, he wanted to know if we were interested. No pressure.
Mind you, we moved here with the job my husband now has because it allowed us to have a job as soon as we got here, but he took a severe pay cut to do that, and the job itself has turned out to be less than ideal.
  Now on top of all my options, we actually have to consider the option of moving closer to the city, for him to change jobs.  This job would bring us really good  financial stability.  We are not really money people, which is exactly why we don't have any money.  And although money doesn't make happiness, it sure does help.  And if we don't jump at the opportunity to make money, then how the hell will we ever have money?
 But really? The same exact day I get an offer, an interview where I have always wanted to work, and start training at a Yoga studio? The same day!!!!???? I had actually been planning on calling this man's wife, to get some advice from her in my job decision making!
 This morning my husband said to me: " Do you know what sucks?" What? " When you try to sleep on something and instead you can't sleep because of it!"
  We are finally starting to fell at home in our new house.  We love it.  We love having a yard.  We love being in the country.  We love having so much space.  However, this town is seasonal.  And this is the season. 
So if we are not really making a lot of money during the season, chances are we will not be making a lot during the off seaon.  But we just moved!!!!!!! When do we get to stay somewhere???????
So here we are, in indecision land, weighing our options, lots of options, thinking of how many times, while we lived in Boston, my husband wished to get that phone call from my former boss. We think at least seven. 
 This is one of the times in life, where the line is very blurry, and you wish it was clearer.  The pros and the cons are both high on either end, and you feel that whichever decision you make, regret will surely ensue.
Today is my first day working at Nauliland, the retreat house.  So I will try to be present, and take it one minute at a time, as I go to my first "work" day since we moved here. I will bring with me an imaginary giant colorful umbrella, and hope that at least for today, it covers me from the rain, that I actually, somehow, wished for.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

To hunt: not quite yet. To gather: oh yeah!

At some point in our lives, most of us will experience the pleasure of picking a vegetable or fruit from the plant.  Some, luckier than others, will experience it more than once, or even on a regular basis. 
If it's been a while since the last time you picked something off a tree, the memory of it might bring feelings of nostalgia.
  Maybe you were a young child growing up in New England, and your parents took you apple picking.  Maybe you spent a summer on your uncle's farm and helped him harvest some tomatoes off the vine.
   For me, one of those memories is of eating mangoes off my great aunt's tree.  Her house was the most beautiful house ever.  It was one of the traditional Spanish architecture homes common in that neighborhood, and her yard was lush and manicured.  There was a gorgeous Spanish mosaic bench under the mango tree.  My cousins and my brother and I would climb onto the bench and help each other reach high branches of the tree to get the ripest mangoes.  Then we would sit on the bench, and rip the skin of the fruit with our teeth. Finally, we would suck the intense orange flesh off the pit, its juices running all over our hands and chins.
Like most fruits in our planet, I can guarantee that if you've never had a mango in a place where mangoes grow, you have no idea what a mango really tastes like. Those mangoes off my aunt Lolita's tree, were some of the best I've ever had.
 Nowadays, the conveniences of modern life, and sometimes laziness, have made gathering food something that very few of us still do.  But the pleasures of this act are priceless.
  On our first drive into the town of Sonoma, I was taking in as much of the local scenery as I could, and one of the things I noticed was several loquat trees on the side of the road, bursting with the little orange fruits. I made a mental note to myself. 
A few days later, on my first bike ride into town, I discovered a magic fig tree, also on the side of the main road, full of still unripe black figs. Second note to self. On later days and rides, I saw a myriad of cherry plum trees, and blackberry bushes, all over the place.
  So, slowly but surely, I started to gather. First were the loquats, which turned into a delicious loquat and apricot chutney.  Then I went for the figs,  and even though only a few of them were ready, I still managed to get a couple, including one that was literally as big as an avocado! They were perfect. Sweet like honey. Melt in your mouth goodness.
 At a friend's houseI ran into a plum tree with at least thirty plums on the ground underneath it.  Plum preserves it was!
 I realized that dandelions were taking over a corner of our yard, so I picked their leaves and threw them into our salad.
 I patiently waited for the blackberries, being that it hasn't been hot enough yet for them to ripen to perfection.  A couple of days ago, on my way home after a very long ride to and from an interview, I chose to stop by one of the bushes and see where they were at.  To my surprise, there were plenty that were ready.  So I pulled by bike to the side, found a paper bag in one of its baskets, and got to work. 
 Before I knew it I had completely lost track of time and even space.  Mindfulness came naturally as I slowly scavenged around the thorny bushes for the black berries.  My hands and arms were getting scratched liked crazy, but the dull pain from it was almost unnoticeable, because the reason for it was so much larger than the pain itself.  I kept picking, always spotting more ripe berries at some other corner of the plant, unstoppable.  As they fell on top of each other in the bag, the intoxicating sweet smell of their juices came floating out of it and into my nose. What a fantastic moment.
I was present.  For a good twenty to thirty minutes of my day, nothing else mattered.  Just there, then, that.
 Eventually I decided it was time to give my scratched skin a break (plus I also feel a little greedy whenever I gather fruit, it's good to leave some for raccoons and deer), so I went home and pondered what I wanted to do with the 4 or 5 cups of blackberries I had just magically acquired.
 Lime-Blackberry Sorbet was the answer.  It turned out great.  It's intense in both color and flavor, nice and creamy even though I used no corn syrup or stabilizers. Just fruit, sugar, lime juice and love (ok, maybe a little anticipation too), and everytime I have some it brings me back to my foraging moment as well as others from the past.
Most if not all of those fruits were  going to go bad had I not picked them.  Free food would have been wasted.  Instead, it provided a fun, grounding experience, and some delicious dishes for further enjoyment.
 I believe that growing some food, even if it's just a few herbs off a windowsill, and foraging in our area, are incredible ways to be a little more in touch with how our nourishment is produced.  But the truth of the matter is, it's also a great way to relax, have some fun, and bring back memories of times gone by that we never think about anymore.
 So if you drove by a mango tree that was more than full not too long ago, or if there is fennel growing wild in your neighborhood, or even if it's just a weed, like mint, taking over a corner you walk by regularly, plan on stopping by next time, and collect a few items for your next meal.
The results will be delightful, and the experience itself, eternally rewarding.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

When life gives you mutton, make muttonade?

For those of you not familiar with the term, mutton is a lamb that is over 2 years old. Typically, regular lamb is under one year of age at the time of slaughter.  Baby lamb is between 6 and 8 weeks old, and Spring lamb is usually 3 to 5 months old.
Some people don't like lamb at all.  Its rather strong flavor seems to be unbearable for a number of folks.  For others it's the peculiar smell that does it.  But a large number of us think it's absolutely delicious, and I can't tell you how many times I randomly crave the beautiful juicy lamb chops from Kokkari restaurant in San Francisco. 
That being said, I have never really craved mutton.  For a while I wasn't even sure what it actually was.  The french word for sheep is mouton, so I figured it was at least the same animal.  After some research, mostly verbally questioning my friend Courtney, who works at a lamb farm and has a small heard of sheep that she keeps for dairy, I became familiar with the word and it's definition.
So on Monday afternoon, when I got a message from her about how the mutton they had brought over for their dog Lucy and forgotten in our fridge was totally edible, I got pretty excited.  I thought there were just bones and had been planing on making stock out of them.
She rambled something about how I might think it was gross to eat mutton : why would I think it was gross if I had never had it before? She assured me that it was safe to eat and USDA inspected: why would I think anything fresh from the farm was any less safe than all the stuff we buy at the supermarket not even knowing where it comes from? And since when does an inspection by any US government agency (specially the USDA and the FDA) mean anything anymore?
She also mentioned, and this did mean something, that because this mutton had been raised on grass, grazing on pasture the way that nature intended, it mostly tasted like regular lamb, instead of having mutton's much stronger flavor.
  She suggested I braised it being that it would be rather tough since it was an older animal, and not raised in confinement. The more they move, the leaner they are, the more muscle they have, the less tender their meat is.
So yesterday afternoon, I got to work.  I inspected the meat, as it had been in the fridge for a week now.  It was originally vacum packed and frozen when they put it in the refrigerator. We agreed that since there was only a tiny opening on the seal of the plastic, not enough oxygen could have gotten in there to spoil it, plus we considered the time it must have taken it to defrost inside the cool fridge.  Sure enough, it smelled and looked beautiful. Nice and red.
  I dried them well and seasoned them generally with salt and pepper.  I seared them until a nice golden brown on all sides, and then threw in some onions, carrots, gypsy peppers, and herbs from the garden. Then some wine, and a few spices and garlic. I opened a jar of crushed tomatoes I had preserved last summer and added that as well. Mixed, tasted, re seasoned, and put the meat back in. Into the oven for a few hours. In the meantime, I cooked some white rice. I also made a glaze out of a little vinegar and some cherry jam I had purchased at the Auburn's farmer's market, where this mutton came from.
 Once the meat was nice and tender, I took it out of the sauce, skimmed the fat, glazed it with the jam, put it back in the oven on a sheet tray for a little while, and then added it back to the sauce.
At the last minute, I threw in some zucchini to the mix, poured a hefty serving over the rice, and we sat down to enjoy our dinner.  Needless to say, it was delicious. It has been rather cool in our valley in the evenings so it was the perfect dish for the weather.
 As we savoured every bite, I wondered how many people would have just thrown it away, the minute they realized it was in there.  We thought they were bones and we still kept it!
 I was taught by my parents not to waste food. As a little girl, if I didn't eat my dinner I would have it served for breakfast the next morning, and consecutively until I ate it. As an adult, I have always been very respectful of food, my main argument being that millions of people don't have enough of it, or sometimes any at all. Coming from a country where you meet those people on a regular basis, it's hard to not think about it. Even scraps should be saved, as they are very useful for compost, and then you are giving back to the land, instead of just taking all the time and not giving anything in return.
Then there is also the fact of how much it takes for our food to be produced: how many people's work is involved. How much patience for it to grow, how much time, money, effort.
 Most people don't think about any of this anymore, and it's not necessarily their fault. Our food system is out of control with imports and exports, processed chemicals that are sold as food, and air conditioned supermarkets with neatly packed aisles of millions of items. If you ask any child right now where milk comes from, chances are the answer will be: from the supermarket, if not from the refrigerator!
 This mutton didn't come from the refrigerator. It was once a live animal, who gave its life. It was the fruit of at least five people's hard work. It was at least 2 years old, therefore, it had at least 730 days of hard work, 17 500 hours of hard work. Throwing that away is not an option for my husband and I.
 Instead, we were nourished by it. We mindfully ate the food that was the result of time and effort and a sheep's life.  I took pleasure in preparing it, we took pleasure in eating it, and we raised our glasses to Lucy,  Courtney's dog, whose dinner we were having.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Yoga and Enlightment

Early last week, my dear friends (the bycicle giving ones) came up for a visit.  They are very familiar with the Northern California region, yet had never been to Sonoma proper.  We spend some quality time at our home, I showed them my favorite thrift shop and Mexican restaurant, and then we went to check out  the plaza.
They recently found out they are having a baby. As we browsed in one of the shops I decided to gift my friend a Prenatal Yoga video to help her overcome some anxiety that she is experiencing as a mother to be.  As I was getting ready to pay, I spotted the last issue of Yoga Journal Magazine and quickly grabbed it and added it to my purchase.
I am a subscriber to that publication, and every month, I eagerly await its arrival.  I never know when exactly it will show up, so it's always a pleasant surprise, and I cherish my time to read it, reflect on some of the articles, or even practice it's monthly "home practice" routine. Yoga Journal is part of my practice, and in lots of ways, it's my therapy.
With our move to the West coast, there was a gap in my delivery service, and I hadn't yet received this issue, and was not positive if it would actually arrive.
Being that my husband and I are on a rather tight budget, buying a magazine that I might actually receive in the mail is not very sensible, or something I would usually do.  But my peace of mind had been shaky lately, and my worrying voice had been way louder than usual, so I was yearning for those therapeutical readings and practices, and decided it was worth the risk.
That night, I started reading. I hadn't even gotten past the first pages, the editor's letter, when I was already gaining so much from this issue, I realized it was worth the few dollars extra it cost me. As she spoke about being grateful for life itself and everything that we get with it, she wisely made reference to the fact that if we really think about it, "the stuff I sometimes complain about "having" to do,  is actually the stuff I "get" to do."
It was a giant slap in the face. As the active person that I am, there is always something I have to do.
My husband often jokes with me by calling me a hummingbird or a bumble bee. Even though I enjoy most of the things I self appoint myself to do, I sometimes find myself dreading the fact that I never have time to do nothing.  Even now that I am unemployed.  Reading that letter I realized that I have just been looking at it in the wrong light.  I don't have to do these things : I get to do them. I went to sleep that night a little more at peace than the night before feeling grateful for everything I had/got to do.
The next morning, I decided to switch up my practice and try out the home practice from this issue.  As I prepared for it by reading the suggestions on what to do before and after the session, I read : " Set your intention to trust that everything unfolds as it should when you loosen your grip and allow yourself to be open". WOW! As my worrying voice had been nagging me lately, I tried to remind myself to trust with breathing exercises and friends and family's pep talks. This was the final straw.  I read the words again, this time focusing on them as well as my breathing, and immediately felt my muscles relax and my worries dissolve into the realization that I do trust, that things will work out, that I have to loosen my grip and allow myself to be open.  It is usually not possible to be open if we are tense and preoccupied in an active manner.
Definitely worth the extra couple of bucks.
That night, calm and relaxed, I read the mantra section of the issue: "When you recognize the power of Sri within you, it leads to contentment no matter what your circumstances. (...) No matter how much time, money and love you have, you will always feel as though it's not enough until you can evoke and honor the sri within you. When you do this, what you have feels like more than enough."
 Again, so worth the extra bucks.  I work very hard on quieting my inner chatter: I meditate, I practice asanas, I breathe, I read and write, I cook (which to me is the best therapy in the world), I talk to friends, I vent, I think, and lately I even garden. But sometimes, everybody needs a little extra help to get things done. This issue of Yoga Journal Magazine, was my little extra help. 
I am eternally grateful for that snap decision, that made me quiet my worries about money, and reach for that collection of shiny pages on the stance. By quieting my negative thinking for a few seconds, I got the tools I needed to quiet them for a longer period of time.  As with everything, practice makes perfect, and although perfection in yoga is kind of an oxymoron, by practicing regularly, I can see the benefits slowly but steadily open themselves to me, as I allow to open myself to them.
Oh, and by the way, I never got that issue in the mail!

Saturday, July 3, 2010

How can silence be so noisy?

We have been living in Sonoma for a month today. In our house for three weeks.  So far it has been wonderful.  We have been really enjoying our yard, living in a smaller community, and above all, being back in California.
Most people who know my husband and I well enough, will undoubtedly describe us as city folks.  We love walking as our main method of transportation, we love cheap ethnic eats, people watching is one of our favorite hobbies, and the conveniences that most cities have to offer, as well as their diversity, are just priceless to us.
However, the truth is, we are both country folks at heart.  We have been patiently waiting for the opportunity to have a garden.  To hear the birds singing, to hear the crickets at night.  To see the stars, to go fishing, to take an afternoon hike: to be outside.
We both love nature, we are kind and compassionate towards all animals (with the exception of cockroaches for whom I have absolutely no sympathy whatsoever), we are respectful of the land and of everything that grows in it, and we always literally take the time to admire and smell the roses.
 However, I hadn't had one good night of sleep since we moved here.  As I lay in bed at night, listening to said crickets and the silence that is a background to their song, I somehow managed to be disturbed by every little noise that arose.  I hear the wood expanding. I heard random "bangs" downstairs.  I heard our very large cat's footsteps on the carpet, coming up the stairs, going down again, his tail thumping on the floor, or his loud meowing whenever he heard or saw any other animal outside.  I heard EVERYTHING.  And everything kept me awake.  When I did manage to engage in some pranayama (breathing exercises) and put myself to sleep, I was quickly awaken by the next note of the night's orchestra.  I heard something strange in my husband's breathing, or the cat snoring, or something unrecognizable that prompted an unfamiliar fear in my gut, and in that fashion, the night would go by while I listened to it.
Mind you, we used to live in San Francisco.  The level of noise pollution in that city almost counteracts the beauty of it. The  bells of the charming cable cars will quickly get on your nerves when you have to listen to them day after day, the fog horns, the MUNI buses, the loudest fire trucks and ambulances you will ever hear, let's just say, not very relaxing.  I slept just fine there for six years.
We also lived in Boston for over a year.  Our apartment was in the North End, the historic Italian neighborhood.  Not to be stereotypical but  Bostonians are not the quietest type, and when you add the Italian element to their heritage it gets exponentially louder.  I slept just fine there as well.
 So what is it then? Or I should say, what was it? Last night I finally slept.  I slept well.  I feel rested this morning for the first time in weeks. Unfortunately it will not be easy to figure out what the problem was since there were five variables in question.
Trying to set myself up for success I decided to switch sides of the bed with my husband.  I had been sleeping on the left side for a long time, but when we travel, I usually choose the side based on which one is closer to the bathroom.  I had made the same choice in this house, so I decided to give my old regular side a try.  However, a few other things happened as well: my husband fell asleep on the couch, so for the first part of the night, I had the bed to myself; the cat didn't make a peep all night long; I didn't change our pillows when I changed sides so I ended up sleeping with a different one than usual; and last but not least, I had a job interview yesterday. 
So... Was it just one of them, or a combination of all that finally allowed me to sleep?
It's hard to say. But the more I think about it, the more I have to wonder how much of my subconscious was at play all those restless nights.  When I heard noises, I didn't wake up and worry about money, or about being unemployed, but as I said, I did have an unfamiliar fear in my gut.  Maybe that fear was prompted by my daytime worries.  Maybe I couldn't relax at night because I spent the day tense.  Maybe our emotions affect us more than we care to give them credit for, and they become a vicious circle. The more I worried during the day, the less I slept during the night.  The less I slept during the night, the crankier I got during the day, and the more prone I was to negative feelings and emotions. 
I didn't really think about it.  Even now as I reflect on it, I'm still not positive.  It was just an interview.  I still don't have a job.
Even though I am not 100% on what the main factor that made it happen was, I will cherish all of them.  I will change our night stands today and appropriate myself of the left side once again.  I will keep my new pillow.  I will put the cat in the garage if he wakes me up at night, and I will even have my lovely husband fall asleep on the couch if I have to.  But most importantly, I will give some credit to my emotions, and I will work on practicing a little more meditation and yoga, to calm myself not only on the conscious level, but  on the subconscious one as well. Maybe the noise wasn't really outside, but in my own head after all.