Volume I · The First Chapter, A Keepsake for NICU Beginnings

Vol. I · A NICU Keepsake Journal & Clay Impression Frame

Day 7The nurse's name is Theresa. She brought coffee at 3am and said she's a fighter.
Day 31She held her own temperature for the first time today.
Day 47Breathed without the machine. Ten minutes. Then twelve.

The baby book for the beginning you actually had.

Before the rounds blur together. Before the nurse's name slips. Before you forget what you wanted to remember. A NICU journal and clay impression frame, built for the beginning that generic baby books skip — admission through the first year home.

★★★★★ 4.9 from mothers like you
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You became a mother in a place no baby book knows how to remember.

What's fading right now

The night nurse's name.

Her weight on day 11.

What the doctor said in rounds on Tuesday.

Whether she held steady — or whether she didn't.

Write it down before the fog takes it.

Why you'll keep this one

Built for the beginning you actually had.

  • i.

    NICU-specific from the start.

    Admission, oxygen, rounds. Not "first bath."

  • ii.

    Built to last past discharge.

    Twelve months after the day you came home.

  • iii.

    Permission to skip pages.

    One line is enough. Come back when you can.

  • iv.

    Story + symbol, paired.

    The journal holds the words. The frame — with their tiny clay hand and foot — puts it on the wall.

§ I Recognition

The baby book on your shelf was written for a beginning you didn't get.

The first bath happened in an isolette. The first bottle was given by a nurse named Theresa. The book on your shelf has no page for any of that — it skips the 47 days in between.

Inside The First Chapter — a milestone prompt page from the journal Plate · Inside

Everything about your beginning was different.
Your record of it should be too.

What the baby book asks

What actually happened

"The first time you held your baby"
Day 7. Eleven minutes, in a chair, supervised.
"Baby's first bath"
Day 23. A nurse showed you how, in a basin, in the unit.
"The day we brought baby home"
Day 47. Carried her out in a coat too big. Cried in the parking lot.
"Baby's first outfit"
Day 31. The first one that fit. You photographed her in it twice.

"Don't forget." B · Left too late

§ II The Fog

The blur isn't a feeling. It's neuroscience.

Postpartum brain chemistry. Sleep deprivation below the threshold where memory consolidates. You are not forgetting because you don't care.

From a NICU mom's notes · week two

On Tuesday she was 1,247 grams and she opened her eyes for the first time. The night nurse was named Theresa. She brought us coffee at 3am and said "she's a fighter."

In three months, half of this will be gone.

This is what the fog does, on its own schedule, whether you let it or not.

1 in 3

NICU parents experience PTSD symptoms.

Measurable cognitive impact. Not just "a hard time."

40%

Report clinical anxiety in the first month.

Anxiety steals working memory in real time.

~6 hrs

Average sleep per night for NICU parents.

Below the threshold where memory consolidation works at all.

Sources: March of Dimes · peer-reviewed NICU parent mental health research

§ III The Catch

Three things your notes app can't do.

You don't need another tool that asks more of you. You need one that meets you where you are. Built around your actual capacity — not an idealized version of it.

i.

Catches what the fog takes.

Dated entries, short prompts, a one-line option for the days when one line is all you have.

ii.

Medical and meaningful in one place.

Clinical facts and the moments you don't want to lose, side by side — not scattered across a binder, a notes app, and a baby book that never fit.

iii.

Doesn't quit at discharge.

Monthly pages through year one, the home-day anniversary, the first birthday. The milestones only NICU parents mark.

A journal that meets you where you are and stays until you're ready to put it down.

§ III · ii Inside the Volume

60+ prompts. Zero pressure.

Grouped by chapter, not by week. Enter where you are. Skip what isn't yours yet.

The First Chapter open to a spread — Emma's foreword on the left, a milestone prompt page on the right

A page of voice. A page of structure. Both in your hands.

I.

Admission & the first week

Birth circumstances, first impressions, room for what no one is asking you about.

II.

Daily NICU life

Weight and oxygen alongside the "tiny win" page for things outsiders won't understand.

III.

Milestones inside the unit

First hold. First feed. First day off support. First time you felt like a mom.

IV.

Discharge & coming home

The discharge-day spread and first-night-home prompts.

V.

The first year home

Monthly pages through age one: NICU graduation day, home-day, due date, first birthday.

VI.

For her, one day

A final section for the child to read on her own. Optional. Skippable. Always there.

The tiny clay impression of a premature baby's hand, beside a current photo — The First Chapter keepsake frame

The Keepsake Frame

Her tiny hand. Who she is now.

You won't remember how small she was. Not really. Memory smooths it out — until you can't picture grams, only pounds, only the toddler running across the room.

The clay impression catches the size you'll struggle to believe she ever was. Not as memorial. As origin story. Beside it: a photo of who she became.

She'll ask about it when she's seven. You'll try to explain. Then you'll just let her touch the clay.

§ III · iii Where This Came From
Emma Hartley writing at a hospital bedside Emma Hartley · Founder

Emma Hartley's daughter Nora arrived at 28 weeks.

For 74 days, she tracked everything in phone notes and sticky notes by the bedside: weights, rounds, the nurse's name, the date Nora's heart rate held steady through a full cuddle. "Don't forget," she kept writing. The generic baby journal sat unopened in the car.

"I wish every parent who came through here had something like this." Nurse Maria · Day 31

After Nora came home — 4 pounds 14 ounces on day 74 — Emma built the journal from everything she'd tracked. NICU-specific prompts. Medical and emotional in one place. Pages from admission through the first birthday.

The frame came last. Nora's tiny footprint on the wall, next to a photo of who she is now. Not labeled In Loving Memory. As proof.

"My daughter is going to have this one day. She's going to know exactly how hard she fought." Early reader · NICU mom, 74-day stay

§ III · iv A Note on Alternatives

What the others ask.
What you're actually living.

My Baby's First Year

The golden hour
First cuddle
First bath
Homecoming day
First smile
First time you held your baby

Not built for you

The First Chapter

Day ___

Weight today
What the doctor said in rounds
The nurse's name I don't want to forget
The smallest win nobody else would call a win
What I want to remember about today

Built for this

Generic baby books were written for a beginning you didn't get. Every prompt in this one was.

§ IV Letters

From the readers, so far.

T.

The First Chapter · 72-day NICU stay

Vol. I · Sanity kept

72 days. Saves a parent's sanity.

T.

Dylan

The First Chapter customer · PICU/NICU stay, open heart surgery

Vol. I · In the trenches

Kept me sane during our daughter's PICU/NICU stay after birth with open heart surgery.

Highly recommend for anyone in those trenches, living day by day watching your child fight for their life.

Dylan

Cyrus

Gift buyer · for his sister's NICU baby

Vol. I · The right gift

My sister wanted something for her baby in the NICU that would be a beautiful gift to her when she's older about all that she went through and how hard she fought.

Cyrus

Elle

Gift buyer · for a friend

Vol. I · One place for everything

She was tracking stuff in her phone notes and text messages. Now she has a place to log everything and do a little self care for her.

Elle

The First Chapter keepsake frame mounted on a bedroom wall The keepsake frame · in home

The First Chapter Keepsake Frame · white wood · clay impression kit included in the Complete Set

§ IV · ii What this becomes

Years from now, on an afternoon you can't picture yet — she'll find this on the shelf.

She'll bring it down. She'll ask what these pages say. And you — older, calmer, in a quieter house — will read her the chapter she lived but cannot remember. In your own handwriting.

A mother and her daughter, years later, reading The First Chapter journal together in soft afternoon light Plate · The day she asks

The chapter you wrote on day seven — read aloud, twelve years later.

§ V From the Postbag

Questions, asked and answered.

I'm too overwhelmed to write right now. Will I actually use this?

You don't have to write today. Every prompt has a one-line option. Most parents buy the journal during the stay and fill the longest entries after discharge — once the adrenaline drops. Even half a record is more than a camera roll with no captions.

What if I miss days? Or weeks?

There's no streak to keep. Some entries are written in real time. Some from memory, from text threads, from photos. Some are left blank. The journal doesn't shame you for starting on day 40.

I already have a journal. How is this different?

Most journals stop at discharge, skip the medical layer, or use prompts designed for full-term babies. The First Chapter covers the first year home, handles medical and emotional in one place, and pairs with a clay impression frame so the record doesn't end when the journal does.

Is this the right gift? I don't want to get the tone wrong.

It's the gift that says I see what you're going through more clearly than flowers or a meal card ever could. Most NICU parents don't know products like this exist. The fact that you found it is part of the message.

What if the outcome is uncertain?

This journal is built for the journey, not the ending. Nothing assumes your baby comes home. Nothing forces cheerfulness. If you're navigating a very uncertain prognosis, email us at hello@thefirstchapter.co before ordering.

Will the clay impression kit work for a very small baby?

Yes. The clay impression kit is safe for premature, very small babies. If your baby is too fragile right now, use the kit later — at discharge, at the first birthday — the frame holds any size impression.

What's the return policy?

30-day promise. If it isn't right for any reason, we'll refund you and you keep the book. No forms, no return shipping, no story required.

A note on returning

If it isn't right, send it back.

If it isn't right for you, for any reason, we'll refund you and you keep the book. No forms, no return shipping, no story required.

The First Chapter

A parent and child reading The First Chapter journal together

"

One day, she'll ask how she got here.

She'll want to know the name of the nurse. What you were thinking on day 31. You can tell her, if you write it down.

Order Volume I

Free shipping · 30-day promise · Heirloom-built

Colophon

Volume I of The First Chapter is set in Newsreader, a contemporary editorial serif by Production Type, with body text in Inter and editorial labels in JetBrains Mono. The journal is printed on acid-free, uncoated 60# paper, perfect bound in a matte clay paperback. The keepsake frame is white wood with a 3D clay impression kit included.

The journal and frame are intended as a keepsake. They are not a substitute for clinical records and should not be used in place of guidance from your medical team.

The First Chapter · MMXXIV Vol. I · A Quiet Catalog for NICU Beginnings

Edition B · Complete Set

$89.99 · Journal + frame + box