Jabalog - A private journal for your GLP-1 journey

by
Most GLP-1 tracking ends up in a notes app, a spreadsheet, or a bloated app that requires a subscription. Jabalog does one thing: it tracks your injections. Log each dose, the site you used, and how you felt. Your full titration history sits in one place, so you can see if side effects line up with a dose change. Site rotation is built in, so you stop guessing which leg was last. One-time purchase, no subscription. Your data stays on your phone.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Hey everyone, author here. I started on tirzepatide earlier this year, and within a couple of weeks I had a mess of half-remembered details. Did I do the left or right side last time? Was that wave of nausea from the dose bump or just a bad day? When is the next shot even due? It was all in a notes file and calendar events that got worse every week. Then I discovered there are apps for this. So I gave some of them a try but the problem was the ones I tried all wanted a monthly subscription to do what is basically logging, and they were bloated: a coach, a feed, meal plans, a pile of stuff I was never going to use anyway. I just wanted to log a shot in ten seconds and keep my history so I built the thing I wanted. It started as plain dose logging. Injection sites came next, once I got tired of guessing my rotation. Logging how I felt came after that, because I wanted to keep track of potential side effects. That’s basically how the whole thing grew. Every feature is something that annoyed me personally. It’s a one-time purchase after a 15 trial, because I don’t think a journal should rent itself to you forever, and your data stays on your phone so there are also no ongoing server costs. Happy to answer anything, and all feedback welcome.