A Mom’s Guide to Remembering the Little Things
This post may contain affiliate links and CorporetteMoms may earn commissions for purchases made through links in this post. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
- Take a screencap of a text-messaged exchange sharing quotes or other funny stories: Sometimes I’ll write a funny quote or share a story with my mother via text, or send a picture with a brief explanation, and when I look back to do the family album there’s only the picture and a vague memory about why it was so funny. So I’ve started taking a screencap of the text message so it gets saved with the photos on my phone and processed with all the others. Here’s how to take a screencap on an iPhone.
- Take notes: Every few months I’ll try to sit down with my husband, think of everything the kids are doing “now,” and memorialize it into an email or other document that I save with the photos. (Examples: “J loves swimming and the Wild Kratts! H loves the app ‘Busy Shapes’ and is kind of obsessed with spinning tops and other things. H is very particular about which lights are on and which are off.”) Some of it is nothing (or it’s a repeat of something I’ve written down before), but when I come across it a year or two later I often find myself saying things like “awww, I forgot that,” or “my goodness, how could I forget THAT stupid talking toy?”
- Send emails to myself and label them “photo album.” If I’m sending a funny story to the grandparents via text, I often try to include my email address on the group text message so I can file the message away later.
Keep a mini-diary of the kids. This is my latest method: I bought an Erin Condren yearly planner and am recording quotes and other mini-milestones (first time watching Indiana Jones!) for each day. My Condren planner is beautiful but it was ridiculously expensive; this $12 Ban.Do planner on sale at the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale (August 2016-December 2017!) looks like it would functionally be about the same. Because there are only a few lines for every day it isn’t too intimidating — and I don’t feel bad if I go several weeks without writing anything in it. (Pictured at right: my entry from Christmas Eve 2015, memorializing the toys that the boys were most excited about — in my family we open presents from family on Christmas Eve and presents from “Santa” on Christmas morning.) I also have Q&A a Day for Kids: A Three-Year Journal, which features a daily question for you to ask your child (e.g., “If you buried a treasure chest what would be in it?” and a few lines to write his or her response.
- Digital methods: I haven’t used Cozi, but a girlfriend of mine loves it. It’s a family app that lets you sync schedules, grocery lists, and recipes, and it has a “journal” section as well, which might just be perfect for these little memories.
- Other more traditional keepsake journals: I have a few other books lying around, like the Mom’s 5-Second Memory Journal (it’s more about who you are than anything happening with the kids at the moment) and the My Quotable Kid book, but I fear both will be hard to “process” in to my photo album system or otherwise really revisit. Another option is One Line a Day: A Five-Year Memory Book, which only requires a few minutes a day and is $10 on Amazon.
Merely a smiling visitor here to share the love (:, btw outstanding design and style.
Good blog post. I definitely love this site. Thanks!
I have one of those “mom’s one line a day” 5 year journals for each kid. At first I stressed about thinking of something every day, but now I leave the page blank if there’s nothing or if I skipped that day. I try to record something funny they said or a random milestone like “ate first handful of dirt” or even what they threw a fit about. Just random tidbits from their lives.
I also make a Shutterfly yearbook each Christmas season, when the office is dead. I back up my phone pics to the cloud, so I just scroll through the year and pull out a few good pics from each month (plus have pages for vacations or holidays), make a page for each month/event, and print. I print copies for each of the kids too, so they’ll have a full set of family yearbooks when they grow up. Not super high quality, but better than the pictures being lost because formats have changed by the time they’re 30.
I have a single page milestone list that I printed out from a craft blog and add to that whenever I can. I sort through pics every couple months and print the best 10-20; those go straight in an album in whatever order they are received in. I add quick notes if I can. The milestone list is in the front of the same album. And for videos, I just outsourced that to my dad, who is delighted with the project: he’s taking 9 months worth of 1-minute video clips and assembling them into a logical DVD for me.
That’s it ladies, that’s all I can handle right now!!!
I just purchased that Ban.Do agenda and it’s going right back. Maybe I am OLD and UNHIP, but all the twee stickers and tongue-in-cheek comic illustrations just take up space and make the agenda bigger than it needs to be. Yeah, I just read my rant and affirmed: I am an old lady who had no time for that shi*te
Littlehoots does that I think.
I would love to find an app that lets me take a picture, stick a caption on it, and then eventually convert it into some sort of photo book. Is there anything like that out there? I guess I could use instagram and then have my instragram feed converted into a book.
I was a beta user and now a paid subscriber to Qeepsake, the text message “baby book” and I love it. They send you a question about your kid via text and you just text back and ultimately you can have it all made into a book. You can also just text a message anytime to save it in the journal. Depending on your plan, you can have a question every day, for multiple kids, an additional text to the other parent, and even text photos to include in the book. It’s super convenient.