A lot of parents keep tracking past the newborn stage — not because
someone told them to, but because it genuinely makes their life
easier. That's worth being honest about too.
Having data is calming. When your brain is running on four hours of
sleep and you can't remember if the last feed was 45 minutes ago
or two hours ago, opening the app and seeing the answer right there is
a relief. It takes one decision off your plate at a time when every
decision feels enormous.
Pediatrician visits go better when you have real numbers. Instead of
saying "I think she's eating okay?" you can pull up a
week of data. Doctors love this. It makes the appointment faster and
more useful for everyone.
You can spot patterns you'd miss otherwise. Maybe baby eats less
on the days they nap longer. Maybe they cluster-feed every evening but
you didn't realize it until you saw it laid out. These patterns
are invisible when you're in the middle of it. Data makes them
obvious.
And if you have a nanny, a partner who does some feeds, or
grandparents helping out — a shared log means nobody has to text
"when did baby last eat?" every two hours. The handoff just
works.