Hello F.,
I am sorry you are having a hard time. Mine is a night waker also (usually two or three times), but I am a good sleeper and don't mind that much.
I strongly, strongly oppose CIO, so that has never been an option for us, but here are a couple of things that have worked:
- consistent bed time, and putting her down when tired. If my daughter goes to bed too late, I know the night will be hell, she will not find that deep relaxing sleep, even though she is tired. Also, if she is very tired earlier than usual, I will let her go to bed early! It does not result in her getting up any earlier.
- go to bed early, don't stay up! My daughter usually goes to bed at 8 and I try to be in bed by 9. Yes, I would like to stay up longer and watch TV sometimes or just get things done, but I need the sleep. Also, the more anxious I get about getting enough sleep, the more she wakes, I am sure that my anxiousness transfers to her.
- if you are with a partner, share nighttime parenting. If my daughter wakes up before my hubby goes to bed around midnight, he will try to soothe her (about 85% successful now, after a little bit of a trial period), that way I get a good stretch of sleep before her first nightime feeding - it makes a world of a difference.
- consistency, if cosleeping is not for you (it is not for us, since hubby is a light sleeper) if have found that after a few weeks of consistently putting her down in her own crib after the nighttime nursings, she will sleep longer stretches. In the beginning that meant sometimes I would getup, nurse, lay in crib, get up again 30 min later.... but once she got the message that I would always put her back in the crib, she was more comfortable there.
- on the occasional morning that she is wide awake at three, I take her into the living room (which is babyproofed), turn on her music and let her play by herself while I sleep on the couch... that way I get to sleep and she stops fussing and waking everyone up!
- Last but not least, I never ever let her get herself all worked up crying. I go in as soon as I hear her waking up, and nurse her before she's even fully awake - otherwise she will go into a full on meltdown and not sleep for hours and frankly, while she is crying no one in our house is sleeping, so that would not be helpful anyways.
We still go through phases where she is waking even more often, when she is teething or sick, and I just deal with it, stay up with her and remind myself that it will pass.
My philosophy on the whole sleep issue is, that many people have trouble sleeping for whatever reason, and if you could simply force sleep on someone, there would not be billions of dollars made in prescription sleep aids. Why anybody thinks that trying to FORCE sleep on a baby, by letting them cry to exhaustion, is ok, is beyond me.
Try to get breaks for yourself to catch up on sleep, nap while someone is watching her or while she is napping, go to bed early. From my experience, the more worked up you get about loosing sleep, the less she will sleep, because she is sensing your tension.
Good luck.