When parenting is in dispute, memory is not enough. A parenting-time timeline — a dated, factual record of what actually happened — helps you see patterns, answer questions clearly, and give a judge or lawyer a picture they can follow. Best of all, it is something you can build a little at a time.
What a parenting-time timeline is
It is simply a chronological list of parenting-related events, each with a date and a short, factual description. Over weeks and months, that list becomes a story told in facts: who the children were with, how exchanges went, and what was agreed or changed.
What to record
- Scheduled time and exchanges — and whether they happened as planned
- Late, missed, or cancelled exchanges (with the date and time)
- Schedule changes and how they were agreed (or not)
- Important communications about the children
- Day-to-day care: school, appointments, activities, routines
Stick to facts, not conclusions
This is the most important rule. Write "the 5:00 PM exchange was cancelled by text at 4:58 PM," not "my ex is unreliable." Facts are persuasive and hard to argue with; conclusions invite a fight and can undercut your credibility. Let the pattern speak for itself.
Capture as you go
The best timeline is one you keep in real time. A short note the same day beats trying to reconstruct months later. Recording the positive too — the good days, the routines, the involvement — gives a fuller, fairer picture, not just a list of problems.
Turn it into a clear summary
When you need it, sort your entries by date and you have an instant chronology. Pair it with your evidence — link each event to the screenshot or document that backs it up — and you have something genuinely useful for a case conference or a lawyer meeting.
How SteadCase helps
SteadCase has a Daily Journal for day-to-day parenting moments and a Case Log for events, observations, statements, communications, and requests — each dated and linkable to your evidence. When you're ready, the Export Summary pulls it into a clean chronology you can print or share.
Record facts, not conclusions — a calm, dated record is more powerful than any adjective.