@MsEmmeline thanks, really helpful to hear your experience.
@Fancyties Thank you. appreciate any advice (and meant no disrespect to the profession by my question...just reading it back I realise it might appear a bit rude!)
So here's the situation. My Lo is 6 months old and EBF. She was a very unsettled and refluxy baby from birth, and has been very alert from the outset. She would scream for hours and was very hard to settle, especially in the daytime. Until about 4.5 months and the dreaded regression/progression her overnight sleep was amazing (sometimes 8-9 hours straight after being fed to sleep).
The reflux seems to have improved now and she is rarely sick, but daytime sleep remains a challenge and for the last 7 weeks nighttime sleep has been horrendous. We are on our knees with exhaustion.
In the daytime she will only sleep with constant movement (car/pram/sometimes bouncer), so I'm racking up several miles walking a day and some large petrol bills! Stopping the car or pram even for a few minutes usually results in her waking.
By 5.30pm she is exhausted, so I take her to a dark bedroom to feed to sleep (takes at least an hour before I can even attempt moving her to the crib) and we then begin the merry dance of her waking every 5mins to 1 hour and being repeatedly rocked or fed back to sleep for the rest of the night. Sometimes around 4am I try and bring her into our bed but she will usually only co-sleep with a boob constantly in her mouth and even that is hit and miss. I don't really want to co-sleep long term as I find it very uncomfortable and it doesn't seem to work that well for us anyway.
We have a bedtime routine (nappy/PJs/story/sleeping bag/feed) but this doesn't seem to be helping. I can only describe it as her being permanently 'wired' - she is frantic/very vocal and quickly bored/frustrated wherever she is during the day and doesn't seem able to wind down.
Any advice on how to help us all get some sleep would be much appreciated. We are exhausted and LO seems grumpy a lot of the time due to being permanently knackered, poor thing!