1. Flat on my back. The first 10-20 minutes are close to excruciating as my back "settles in," but after that it's okay. However, if I sleep on my sides my shoulders dislocate and my jaw subluxes, and if I sleep on my stomach I can't turn my head sideways to breathe without major neck pain.

2. Oops, I told you which positions I can't sleep in when I answered number 1.

3. I sleep on a $14 camping air mattress. Actually, I sleep on a stack of two of them... this makes it normal bed height so that I can get back out of bed in the morning. I pump it up really really full, so it's quite firm... with a bit of elastic-ey give at the pressure points. It's the most comfortable thing I've ever slept on! (and cheap

)
4. Right now I have two thin, $2.00 pillows from Target that equal one small- to average-thickness pillow put together. Usually I have my old, "mushy" pillow which scrunches up wonderfully under my neck and I use one thin, cheap pillow under the rest of my head. Unfortunately, I'm still waiting for my former roommate in Florida to send me my pillow and my teddy bear--they didn't fit into my boxes when I moved to Boston a few weeks ago. I can't wait... my neck hurts!

5. I take a tiny little dose of trazadone before I go to bed (I'm super-sensative to the stuff). 1/8 to 1/4 of the normal "starting dose" usually makes me droopy enough to fall asleep most nights. I also take a muscle relaxant in the evening (baclofen) and if things are bad despite my afternoon pain meds I'll add an extra dose or half-dose of methadone in the evening.
6. I spend some time with my heating pad draped over my back before I get into bed to get the muscles relaxed a bit... preparation for the dreaded "spine settling" routine. A little violin music never hurts.
I'm actually sleeping better lately than I have in a long time, and quite happy about it. I still sleep less than a person should, and still wake up feeling like I haven't slept in a week, and still and drag along all day... but that's life. At least I wake up.

'Erie (-: