In custody conflict, memory is fragile. Documentation gives structure to events that would otherwise become competing stories.
The problem
Parents often rely on memory, screenshots stored in different places, or verbal explanations. When pressure rises, those fragments are hard to organize and easy to overlook.
Why it matters
Courts, lawyers, police, agencies, and other professionals usually need specific dates, times, records, and supporting material. A calm timeline is stronger than a dramatic explanation.
What to capture
Record dates, exchanges, missed parenting time, child-related concerns, expenses, messages, witnesses, and attachments. Keep entries factual and consistent. Avoid exaggeration because credibility matters.
How CustodyMate helps
CustodyMate provides a structured place to document events, attach files, flag issues, and generate reports from the information you have already captured.
Practical next step
Create one entry today for the most recent important custody event. Include date, time, what happened, who was involved, and any supporting evidence.
Important note
CustodyMate is an organization and documentation tool. It does not provide legal advice, therapy, emergency support, or court-certified findings. Always consult qualified professionals for legal, safety, or clinical guidance.