Journaling for a season of life
Pregnancy Journal: How to Capture the Nine Months You Won't Want to Forget
The bump fades from memory faster than you'd believe. So does the first flutter, the secret weeks, the exact words you used to tell the people you love. A pregnancy journal keeps all of it — not as medical data, but as the story of how it felt to be carrying them.
The short version
- A pregnancy journal captures the feeling, not the chart. Symptoms and dates go in your notes app; this is for the first reaction, the secret weeks, the first kick, the fear and the wonder.
- Start the day you find out. The first trimester holds the most fleeting feelings of all — and they're gone within weeks if you don't catch them.
- Organize by trimester and milestone — the test, the announcement, the first flutter, the letter to baby, the long final wait.
- Write at least one direct letter to your unborn baby. It becomes the heart of the whole keepsake.
- Add more than words. Scans, bump photos, the first tiny outfit — and voice notes, which keep the actual sound of you in this season.
On this page
- What a pregnancy journal is (and what it isn't)
- When to start — and why earlier is better
- First trimester: the secret months
- Second trimester: the bump and the first kick
- The letter to your unborn baby
- Third trimester: the long, impatient wait
- A week-by-week pregnancy journal, made simple
- Beyond writing: scans, photos, and voices
- How to keep it up when you're exhausted
- Frequently asked questions
Here's the short answer: a pregnancy journal is a keepsake record of the nine months and how they felt — your first reaction to the test, the announcement, the first kick, your hopes and fears, and a letter to your baby. Start it the day you find out, organize it loosely by trimester, and aim for honesty over polish. The goal isn't to track your pregnancy medically. It's to keep the feelings that fade fastest.
Because they do fade. Talk to any parent a few years on and they'll tell you the same thing: the bump that defined their whole world is now a blur, the symptoms a vague memory, the exact moment they first felt movement almost impossible to summon. The chart in your maternity notes survives. The feeling doesn't — unless you write it down while it's still happening.
What a pregnancy journal is (and what it isn't)
A pregnancy journal is a place to record your inner experience of carrying a child: the emotions, the fears, the daydreams, the small ordinary moments that turn out to matter most. It's a keepsake first and foremost. That's the whole distinction worth holding onto, because "pregnancy journal" gets used for two very different things.
On one side there's the tracker — weight, blood pressure, kick counts, appointment dates, symptoms logged by the hour. That's genuinely useful, and a notes app or a dedicated tracking app does it well. On the other side there's the keepsake — and that's what this guide is about. When people search for pregnancy journal ideas, this is almost always the thing they're reaching for: something to read back in ten years and feel the months again.
A pregnancy journal isn't a baby memory book, which starts at birth and tracks the child afterward. It isn't a fertility journal, which holds the trying-to-conceive chapter that came before. A pregnancy journal sits in between — the nine months when they exist but you haven't met them yet. Many parents keep all three; each one keeps a different season.
You don't need a beautiful guided book with gilded prompts to do this, though they're lovely if you want one. A plain notebook works. A notes file works. Your voice works. What matters is that it's yours and that it captures the truth of the day rather than a curated highlight reel. If you've never kept any kind of journal before, our guide on how to start journaling covers the basics of getting past the blank page — all of which apply here.
When to start — and why earlier is better
Start the moment you find out. Not when it shows, not when you've told people, not when you've bought the cute journal — the day the test turns positive, while your hands are still shaking. First trimester journaling captures feelings that genuinely have no second chance: the disbelief, the private joy or terror, the strangeness of carrying a secret around in a normal-looking body.
There's a practical reason too. The early weeks are emotionally enormous and physically draining, which is exactly when memory is least reliable. By the third trimester you'll have forgotten how the first felt — the specific quality of the early nausea, the way you kept checking the test was real, the conversation where you first said the word "pregnant" out loud. None of it feels like it could ever be forgotten. All of it will be, unless it's written.
The feelings you're sure you'll never forget are the exact ones that vanish first.
If you're reading this further along — second trimester, third, even days from your due date — start anyway, today. Write what you remember of the earlier weeks in one catch-up entry, then carry on from here. A journal that begins at week 28 is infinitely better than the one you meant to start at week 6 and never did.
First trimester: the secret months
The first trimester is the most under-documented stretch of pregnancy, precisely because so much of it is private. You're often not telling people yet, so the feelings have nowhere to go — which makes the page the perfect place for them. These are the entries you'll be most grateful for later.
Prompts for the early weeks:
- The moment. How did I feel the second I saw the test? Where was I, what time was it, what did I do next?
- The secret. What's it like carrying this around when no one knows? Who do I most want to tell, and why am I waiting?
- The body. What's my body doing that's new and strange? The tiredness, the nausea, the cravings, the smells I suddenly can't stand.
- The fear. What am I most afraid of right now? (Naming it is allowed. This is yours.)
- The wonder. When does it feel real, and when does it feel impossible?
Don't worry about writing well. A few honest fragments beat a polished paragraph that says nothing. If the words won't come on a hard, exhausted day, that's normal — the same gentle, low-bar approach we cover in how to be consistent with journaling applies double here, when you may be too tired to lift a pen, let alone craft a sentence.
Second trimester: the bump and the first kick
The middle stretch is, for many, the golden one — the sickness eases, the energy returns, and the pregnancy stops being abstract. This is where the keepsake really fills out, because the milestones come thick and fast. Mark each one while it's fresh:
- The first flutter. That faint, you're-not-sure-it-was-real movement. Describe it the day it happens, because you genuinely won't be able to later.
- The first real kick. And the first time someone else felt it through your skin.
- Finding out (or choosing not to). The scan, the gender if you learn it, the names you start trying on.
- The bump arriving. The day your clothes stopped fitting, the first time a stranger noticed.
- Picturing them. Who do you imagine they'll be? Whose nose, whose temperament, whose laugh?
This is also the season to start bump updates — short, dated entries every week or two that note size, how you're feeling, what you're craving, what's on your mind. They don't have to be long. "Week 22. Everything aches but I felt three real kicks during dinner and cried a little. Wanted pickles. Happy." is a perfect entry, and the kind of line that will undo you completely when you read it back.
Keep a single recurring prompt you answer each week: "How do I feel about you this week?" Addressed directly to the baby. Over nine months it becomes a quiet, accumulating love letter — and it makes each week's entry effortless to start.
The letter to your unborn baby
If you write only one thing in your whole pregnancy journal, write this: a direct letter to your unborn baby. Not about them — to them. It's the entry that, more than any other, turns a record into an heirloom, the page a grown child might one day read and understand exactly how wanted they were before they ever arrived.
You don't need to be a writer. You need to be honest. Some openings to try:
- "By the time you read this…" — tell them what the world looks like as they arrive, what you and their other parent are like right now, what's happening in your lives.
- "What I want you to know is…" — the things you hope they carry, the way you already love them.
- "I'm a little afraid that…" — honesty about your fears as a parent-to-be reads, years later, as tenderness, not weakness.
- "The day I found out about you…" — retell the beginning, addressed to the person it began.
This is a cousin of future self journaling — writing across time to someone who can't answer yet — except the person you're writing to doesn't exist in the world quite yet. That's what gives it its ache and its power. Date it. Write more than one if you want; many parents write a letter each trimester, or one on each birthday before birth.
Third trimester: the long, impatient wait
The final stretch has its own distinct emotional weather: nesting, restlessness, fear, impatience, and a strange anticipatory grief for the just-the-two-of-you life that's about to end. It's rich material, and it's easy to skip because you're uncomfortable and over it. Push through — these are some of the most poignant entries to read back.
- Nesting. What are you preparing, washing, folding, arranging? The room, the bag, the absurd 3am cleaning.
- The fear and the readiness. Birth on the horizon. What are you bracing for? What do you feel ready for?
- The goodbye-and-hello. What will you miss about life right now? What can't you wait for?
- The last entries. A few lines in the final days — "any day now" — that you'll someday read knowing exactly what came next.
Reflective writing through a season this charged isn't only for the keepsake; it can genuinely steady you. Putting a swirling fear into a sentence makes it smaller and more handleable, which is the everyday mechanism behind journaling for mental health. To be clear, a journal isn't a substitute for professional care — if anxiety or low mood is heavy during pregnancy or after, please reach out to your midwife, doctor, or a mental-health professional. The page is a companion, not a clinician.
A week-by-week pregnancy journal, made simple
A week-by-week pregnancy journal sounds ambitious, and the rigid printed kind often becomes a source of guilt — all those blank weeks staring back at you. The fix is to keep the recurring template tiny enough that any week, however rough, can be filled in two minutes. Here's a frame that works:
| Prompt | What it keeps |
|---|---|
| Week & date | The anchor — so the entry has a place in time later. |
| How I'm feeling, in three words | The emotional weather, fast. "Tired, hopeful, enormous." |
| What my body's doing | One symptom or change worth remembering. |
| A moment from this week | The single thing you'd be sad to forget. |
| To you, this week… | One line addressed straight to the baby. |
Five short lines. On a good week you'll write far more; on a brutal week, five lines is a complete, kept entry. This trimester-and-milestone scaffold is really just a focused version of broader journaling for a goal or season — a clear container that makes showing up easy. If you'd like a deeper well of questions, our master list of journal prompts can be adapted to almost any week, and what to write in a journal helps on the days your mind goes blank.
Beyond writing: scans, photos, and voices
A pregnancy keepsake journal is richer when it isn't only words. The things worth tucking in alongside the entries:
- Ultrasound scans. The grainy first one, the profile, the surreal 3D one. Note the date and how you felt seeing it.
- Bump photos. Same angle each week if you can — the time-lapse of it is extraordinary to flip through.
- The first outfit. The tag, the receipt, or a photo of the tiny impossible thing you couldn't resist buying.
- The positive test. A photo of it, or the date and time written down.
- Other people's words. A few lines from your partner, your mother, a sibling — the people who'll love this baby too. Their entries become some of the most treasured pages.
And then there's voice — the one medium most pregnancy journals miss, even though it's the one that captures the most. Writing at 9pm when you're shattered tends to flatten everything into "tired, good day." But thirty seconds of talking keeps the exact tone of the moment: the laugh when you describe the first kick, the wobble in your voice the day you found out, the bone-deep exhaustion you can hear but could never write. Years on, the actual sound of you in this season is worth more than the neatest handwriting. A guided journal can't do that; spoken entries can.
How to keep it up when you're exhausted
Pregnancy is the worst possible time to demand discipline of yourself, so don't. The journals that survive are the ones with the lowest bar. A few honest principles:
- Aim for milestones, not a daily streak. You don't need to write every day — you need to catch the moments that matter. A handful of rich entries across nine months beats a guilt-ridden empty grid.
- Keep the weekly template tiny. Five lines. Two minutes. Forgive the weeks you skip entirely.
- Anchor it to something. The Sunday-night bump photo, the post-appointment debrief, the moment you get into bed.
- Use whatever's nearest. The fancy journal you bought can sit unopened while the real keeping happens in your phone. Capture first; make it pretty never, or later.
The point isn't a perfect record. It's that, somewhere down the line, you get to open this and be handed back the months — the bump, the secret, the first flutter, the wait — in your own honest words. That's the whole quiet gift of it.
This is exactly the gap Fond was built for. It's a voice journal you simply talk to: tap once, say a sentence about your day — the appointment, the kick, the way you felt — and it transcribes it and quietly keeps the people, places, and days you mention. For a pregnancy journal, that matters in a particular way: the voice note catches the exact tone of the moment — the exhaustion, the joy, the first flutter — that handwriting at 9pm so rarely does. The keepsake ends up sounding like you, in this season, which is the part you'll most want back. (Fond is coming soon.)
Frequently asked questions
What should I write in a pregnancy journal?
Write your first reaction to the test, the announcement, the first kick, bump and symptom updates, your hopes and fears for your baby, and a letter directly to them. A pregnancy journal is about your inner experience of the nine months, not just the medical facts — so capture how it felt, not only what happened.
When should I start a pregnancy journal?
Start the moment you find out, even before there's a bump to show. The first trimester holds some of the most vivid and fleeting feelings of the whole pregnancy — the disbelief, the secret, the early symptoms — and those fade fast. The sooner you start, the more of the early weeks you'll keep.
What are good pregnancy journal prompts?
Try: How did I feel the moment I saw the test? What do I want you to know about the world you're arriving into? Where was I when I first felt you move? What am I most afraid of, and most excited for? Trimester-by-trimester prompts work well — early ones about the secret and the symptoms, later ones about the kicks, the nesting, and the wait.
How is a pregnancy journal different from a baby book?
A pregnancy journal documents the nine months before birth and your inner experience of carrying — the feelings, fears, and hopes. A baby book or baby memory book typically starts at birth and tracks the child's milestones afterward. Many parents keep both: the pregnancy journal is your story; the baby book is theirs.
What can I add besides writing?
Tuck in ultrasound scans, bump photos at each stage, the receipt or tag from the first outfit you bought, a positive-test photo, and short entries written by your partner or family. Voice notes are worth keeping too — the actual sound of how tired, excited, or amazed you were in the moment.