The Efficient Home
Meal plans, household logistics, the chores you keep putting off, and the systems that quietly run a busy household in the background.
A practicing physician's playbook
I'm Alex, an anesthesiologist. I write about the AI tools and workflows I use for the part of life that happens outside the hospital. The home, the money, the travel, the kids. Strictly non-clinical. No stigma, no jargon, no wasted time.
I try the AI tools and trends so you don't have to, and I write up the ones that actually save a tired physician time.
If any of these sound familiar, you're in the right place.
You don't need to be technical. You don't need to be early. You just need the part that actually works, written by someone who also has a call schedule.
Five pillars. Everything I publish fits into one of these.
Meal plans, household logistics, the chores you keep putting off, and the systems that quietly run a busy household in the background.
Real estate management, financial systems, side ventures, and the parts of physician money that nobody covered in residency.
School schedules, kids' projects, birthday parties on a post-call day, and using AI as a second pair of hands when you're tapped out.
Travel planning, hobbies, and what "off" time is actually supposed to be for. The good version of a vacation day, planned in twenty minutes.
Agents, prompts, and workflows explained for physicians who do not have time to learn another tool. Plain language. Real examples.
Most AI advice online is either too technical for a busy physician or too generic to survive contact with a call schedule. I built Life After Call to fill the gap.
I'm a practicing physician. I started using AI for the boring parts of my own life because I was tired of the household running on the same kind of willpower I was already spending at work. The first month was rough. A lot of the trendy tools were bad. Some were quietly excellent.
This site is where I write down what works, what doesn't, and what's worth your time. No affiliate hustle. No hype. If a tool isn't useful, I'll say so.
I'll keep this list short on purpose. These are the four I open most weeks.
Long writing, document work, anything where I want a thoughtful second draft.
Quick lookups, brainstorming, image generation when I need a poster for my kid's school project at 9pm.
When I'm already in Google Docs, Sheets, or Gmail and want help in place.
When I have a stack of PDFs, articles, or notes and want to ask them questions.
I'll deep-dive each one in its own post over the next few weeks. You don't need all four. Most physicians I know do well with one or two.
Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and NotebookLM. The four AI tools that earned a permanent spot in my week, and the one task each one is best at.
May 18, 2026
FeaturedThe exact prompt, the exact output, and the exact time saved. A real-world workflow for The Efficient Home pillar.
May 18, 2026
FeaturedA practicing physician's intro to using AI for the non-clinical parts of life. What I write about, the tools I actually use, the questions I keep hearing, and why nobody should feel left behind.
May 18, 2026
I do not write about patient care. I do not write about clinical decision-making. I do not write about anything that touches the inside of the hospital.
That's deliberate. AI in the clinical setting is its own conversation, with its own liability, its own regulators, and its own risks. This site is the other half of your life. The part that often gets short-changed when the hospital takes everything else.
Strictly non-clinical. Nothing on this site is medical advice. I do not post about patient care.
You don't have to pick a platform. Pick whichever one you already check.
One physician writing for another. That's the whole brand.