Pregnancy came with questions, lots of them. Some were medical, some emotional, and some so oddly specific that they only made sense late at night. When the house was quiet, my body uncomfortable, and my mind wide awake, ChatGPT quietly became my most consistent pregnancy companion.
Not instead of doctors or midwives, but alongside them. A place where I could ask, re-ask, overthink, and still feel calm.
Why ChatGPT Became My Late-Night Pregnancy Companion
I didn’t always want to Google things. Google tends to escalate quickly, from “Is this normal?” to worst-case scenarios in three clicks. Sometimes I just wanted an explanation, reassurance, or context without panic.
ChatGPT was there when:
- I couldn’t sleep
- I didn’t want to message friends
- My next appointment felt too far away
- My thoughts were louder than my body
It became my judgement-free, always-awake space.
The System I Didn’t Know I Was Building
At some point, my one-off searches quietly turned into a full knowledge archive. I began copying the answers into a Google Doc, so I wouldn’t have to ask the same things again before every appointment or shopping decision. When that document became too long to scroll through, I moved it into NotebookLM, my own little pregnancy reference library.
It had everything in one place: checklists, explanations, hospital bag notes, baby shopping research, feeding questions, and those “is this normal?” moments. Looking back, I wasn’t just searching for answers; I was building a system that helped me feel prepared, informed, and calm.
First Trimester Searches: “Is This Normal?”
This phase was fuelled by nausea, smells, and uncertainty.
Some of my most repeated questions:
- Is it normal to feel nauseous all day but barely vomit?
- Can smell sensitivity really be this extreme?
- Why does warm food smell unbearable?
- Is surviving on cold food okay?
- When does nausea usually stop?
- I’m underweight—should I be worried?
I was living on air fresheners, hiding on a different floor while Rishi cooked, eating cold food under a blanket, and still wondering if everything I felt was normal. ChatGPT didn’t dramatise it; it explained it. That alone helped.
Second Trimester Searches: Planning Mode Activated
As soon as the nausea eased (around week 18), my brain shifted gears.
Suddenly, everything became a list.
- What do I actually need to buy for a newborn in the Netherlands?
- Hospital bag checklist (NL version)
- What does a birth plan look like here?
- Do I need newborn clothes or size 62?
- What’s included in the kraampakket?
- Is a growth scan at 31 weeks routine?
This was the phase of “I need to be prepared for everything”, even though I knew deep down that preparation has limits.
Third Trimester Searches: Emotional + Practical Chaos
This is where questions became heavier and quieter.
- How painful is labour really?
- What if my baby is small?
- What happens when care moves from midwife to gynaecologist?
- Signs of labour vs false alarm
- How do I mentally prepare for childbirth?
Some nights, I wasn’t even looking for answers. I just needed my thoughts organised. Asking the questions felt grounding.
Postpartum Searches: Welcome to Survival Mode
Once the baby arrived, the searches didn’t stop; they just changed.
- Is cluster feeding normal?
- How often should a newborn poop?
- Baby acne or rash?
- How do I know my baby is getting enough milk?
- Why won’t my baby sleep unless held?
Everything felt urgent, even when it wasn’t. ChatGPT became my calm checkpoint before spiralling.
The Questions That Stayed in the Chat Window
Not every search was dramatic or deeply emotional. Many were practical, repetitive, and oddly specific to the phase I was in. But together, they formed a quiet record of my pregnancy, what I was worrying about that week, what I was planning for next, and what I needed reassurance about before my next appointment.
Looking back, it wasn’t about the individual questions. It was about having a space where I could think in real time, organise my thoughts, and feel a little more prepared for what was coming.
What ChatGPT Gave Me (That Google Didn’t)
ChatGPT didn’t replace medical care, and it shouldn’t, but it gave me things Google couldn’t:
- Calm explanations instead of alarmist headlines
- Context without panic
- The ability to ask the same question ten different ways
- Reassurance without judgment
- A place to think out loud at 3 a.m.
Sometimes, that was enough to help me sleep.
A Quiet Reflection
Looking back, these searches are a timeline of my pregnancy, my worries, hopes, and transitions. They show how I moved from fear to preparation to trust, one question at a time.
I don’t remember every answer.
But I remember how supported I felt while asking.
Good