For the trimester when your body changes the plan.
The pregnancy planner that doesn't ask how you're feeling. It asks what you're tracking, what your provider needs to know, and what you need to do before 36 weeks. Clinically grounded. Trimester-specific. Nothing else.

Most pregnancy planners were designed for the pregnancy
you planned to have.
The beautiful ones with weekly prompts and "letter to baby" pages. They assume a pregnancy that goes smoothly, a body that cooperates, and a person who has time to reflect. They do not account for hyperemesis. For PPROM. For a diagnosis at 20 weeks. For the appointment where something changed.
VESSEL was designed for the pregnancy you are actually having. Every page is a working document — an appointment prep sheet, a symptom log, a provider communication record, a birth preferences framework. It is not a keepsake. It is a tool. If it ends up being a keepsake too, that's fine. But the tool comes first.
Eight sections. Every one written for the specific medical and logistical reality of pregnancy.
Not adapted from a wellness planner. Not a general health journal. Built from scratch around what pregnancy actually requires.
Separate sections for T1, T2, and T3 — each one structured around what that trimester actually involves. Symptom patterns, energy ranges, and clinical expectations change significantly between 8 weeks and 36. The tracker reflects that.
One structured page per appointment. Space for questions before, space for what the provider said, space for what changes after. Appointments are 10–15 minutes. This page makes every one of those minutes count.
Not a diary. A structured log with onset, frequency, severity, and a field for what the symptom interrupted. The language your provider needs to assess, in the format they can use.
Labs, ultrasounds, genetic screening, GBS, anatomy scan. Dates, results, and what to ask when something comes back flagged. Because most people forget the numbers the moment they leave the office.
Not a birth "plan" — because plans don't survive labor. A preferences document that covers the decisions that actually come up: pain management, interventions, immediate postpartum, and what to communicate if things change fast.
For the pregnancy where something is being monitored. Gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, placenta previa, cervical incompetence, multiples. Structured documentation for the diagnosis that most planners ignore because it complicates the narrative.
Prenatal anxiety and depression affect 1 in 5 pregnancies. This section is not a mood journal — it is a clinical self-monitoring tool with structured prompts for provider conversations and a reference for when something warrants escalation.
The fourth trimester begins before the baby arrives. Support infrastructure, feeding plan, pelvic floor PT referral, mental health provider identified, partner communication. The decisions that should be made at 32 weeks, not 6 weeks after.
What the pages
actually look like.
Every spread built as a working document — not a journal, not a tracker dressed as one. Clinical structure on every page.
The Pregnancy Planner
200+ structured pages across all 40 weeks — built for the pregnancy you're actually having, not adapted from a general wellness template.
Symptom Documentation Log
Onset, frequency, severity — formatted for clinical reporting, not private journalling.
Scheduled Worry Time
A clinically validated CBT technique for prenatal anxiety — postpone worries to a fixed daily window so they stop leaking into everything else.
Weekly Reset
A structured end-of-week review with a built-in CBT check — what worked, what didn't, and what gets moved to Worry Time instead of carried forward.
Week-by-Week Symptom Tracker
Trimester-specific symptom checklists with space to note relief methods and what to raise with your provider — one week at a time.
Expectations vs. Reality
A structured space to name what you expected and what is actually happening — without minimizing either, with room to process both.
Appointment Preparation Worksheet
Walk into every visit with your top questions ready, symptoms documented, and next steps captured before you leave the room.
Screenshots shown are from the interactive HTML version. PDF version included with every purchase.
What VESSEL looks like
in use.
Two minutes. No voiceover. Every section of the planner — from the appointment prep system to the birth preferences framework — shown as a working document, not a product demo.
- Appointment prep system — one page per visit, all three trimesters
- Symptom log formatted for clinical reporting
- Birth preferences framework for the labor that changes
- Postpartum preparation checklist — decisions before 36 weeks
Nine supplemental tools.
Designed alongside the planner, not after it.
Every VESSEL purchase includes a free lead tool, four purchase bonuses, and four community drops released over the year. These were not assembled from generic content — they were built for the specific gaps in pregnancy support.
One complete, functional document — not a preview of the planner. Used at every OB or midwife appointment, all three trimesters.
Structured sections for: vitals to track before the visit, symptoms to report (with onset and frequency fields), questions to bring, what the provider said, and what changes after. One page per appointment. Works across all three trimesters.
Four tools included immediately on purchase. Each one addresses a specific, documented gap in standard pregnancy support — not a nice-to-have, a gap.
What is clinically expected in your body at weeks 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, and 40. What is normal. What is a flag. What to bring to the appointment when something is happening that isn't on the list. Sources cited.
Scripts for the conversations most pregnant people don't know how to have: asking about a recommendation, declining a procedure, reporting a symptom that's been dismissed, asking for a referral. The exact language — not general advice.
A structured decision guide across every stage of labor: early labor, active labor, transition, pushing, immediate postpartum, and emergency deviation. For the birth that might not go to plan — because most don't.
The decisions and logistics that should be handled before 36 weeks. Support infrastructure, feeding plan, pelvic floor PT referral, mental health provider identified, partner leave plan, freezer meals, emergency coverage. A working checklist, not a wishlist.
Four tools released post-purchase to active VESSEL buyers — each one addressing a documented gap that the planner itself can't close.
For the pregnancy with a diagnosis. Structured tracking for GD, preeclampsia, placenta previa, IUGR, and cervical incompetence — plus a monitoring log for the appointments that happen weekly at 32+ weeks.
A validated self-report screen adapted for the prenatal period, with scoring, a response protocol, and a "bring this to your provider" page. Prenatal anxiety and depression are underdiagnosed. This tool closes that gap.
Not a generic list from a baby website. Organized by: for labor, for recovery, for the baby, for your support person, and for the things the hospital won't tell you to bring but that matter. Verified against current midwifery recommendations.
What is clinically expected from a newborn in days 1–7. Feeding cues, diaper output, jaundice flags, weight loss norms, and the signs that warrant a call to the pediatrician — not a parenting forum.
A complete tool.
Free.
The Pregnancy Clarity Kit — a trimester-specific clinical tool you can use right now.
START THE CLARITY KITNo purchase needed.
"The birth preferences workbook made my hospital bag irrelevant. My midwife said it was the clearest preferences document she'd ever seen from a first-time parent".
— Verified VESSEL buyer 36 weeks · First pregnancy Verified purchase · Review reproduced with permissionWhat it feels like
to have the right tool.
Reviews reproduced with permission. No edits to substance.
"The appointment prep sheet alone was worth it. I finally went to my OB with something documented instead of blanking the moment she walked in".
VESSEL · Week 22 Appointment Prep System"No gratitude prompts. No 'manifest your birth story.' Just: here is what you need to track, here is what is normal, here is what to tell your doctor".
VESSEL · Week 14 No performance"I had a high-risk pregnancy and couldn't find anything that helped me document what was happening between monitoring appointments. The high-risk drop was exactly that".
VESSEL · Gestational diabetes High-Risk Track"I used the provider communication framework to ask for a referral I'd been dismissed about twice. The third time I brought the language from that sheet. I got the referral".
VESSEL · Week 30 Provider Framework"I gave this to my sister at her baby shower instead of a diaper bag. She texted me at week 28 to say it was the best gift she got. That says everything".
VESSEL · Gift purchase Gift · VerifiedYour planner.
Every device.
Always there.
Most digital planners are files tied to one browser on one device. Clear your cache, get a new computer, or open the file on your tablet — and you start from blank.
Every THRESHOLD planner syncs to the cloud. Enter your email. Receive a 6-digit code. You're in — no password to create or remember, no account setup. Your entries save automatically and appear on any device you sign in on.
email.
6-digit code.
automatically.
Tied to one
browser, one device.
- ×Entries live in browser storage — clear cache and they are gone
- ×Switch from laptop to tablet — start from blank
- ×New computer — no way to recover previous entries
- ×Manual PDF export the only backup option
- ×No access from a second device without transferring files
Your entries follow
you everywhere.
- →Saved to your account — browser cache makes no difference
- →Any device, any browser — sign in and everything is there
- →New device, same account — all entries restored instantly
- →Saves after every keystroke — no action needed
- →One account across every planner you own
One purchase.
Nine tools across your pregnancy.
The full VESSEL planner, four purchase bonuses, and four community drops released across your pregnancy. Everything together, one time, no subscription.
- VESSEL · The Pregnancy Planner — Interactive HTML or printable PDF. Eight trimester-specific sections, built from scratch.Core
- The Pregnancy Body Timeline — clinical expectations week by week, with flags and action itemsBonus 01
- The Provider Communication Framework — exact language for the conversations most people don't know how to haveBonus 02
- The Birth Preferences Workbook — structured decision guide for every stage of labor, including deviationBonus 03
- The Postpartum Preparation Checklist — every decision that should be made before 36 weeksBonus 04
- The High-Risk Pregnancy Tracker — structured logging for GD, preeclampsia, IUGR, and other monitored conditionsDrop 01
- The Prenatal Mental Health Self-Check — validated screen with scoring and a provider-ready formatDrop 02
- The Hospital Bag Master List — verified against current midwifery recommendationsDrop 03
- The Newborn First Week Reference — clinical expectations for days 1–7, with flags that warrant a callDrop 04
- 30-day satisfaction guarantee — full refund, no conditions, no formsAlways
Questions about VESSEL.
The pregnancy you're having
already has a planner.
You don't need to be in the first trimester. You don't need to have it together. VESSEL was built for the pregnancy that's already in progress — wherever you are in it.
Another threshold. Another planner built for it.
CURRENT — The ADHD Planner