Paid builderPractice Intelligence Builder
A guided tool for turning scattered practice knowledge into a working AI context system.
Resources
Things I have built, used, watched, read, listened to, or kept close while thinking about care, technology, business, and sustainable practice.
Public tools and artifacts from Craft of Care.
A guided tool for turning scattered practice knowledge into a working AI context system.
A small clinical calculator site I started as a home for quick-reference calculators.
A simple spreadsheet for seeing what your work actually needs to sustain.
Videos, talks, demos, and walkthroughs that make AI concepts easier to understand or use.
Teresa Torres walks through how she uses Claude Code, Obsidian, markdown files, and context systems for tasks, writing, and day-to-day knowledge work.
Books that have been especially useful in the practical, emotional, or strategic work of owning a business.
Useful for seeing the difference between doing the work, managing the work, and building a practice that can actually hold the work.
A helpful reframe for choosing leverage, simplification, and higher-quality constraints instead of just doing more.
A book I return to for thinking about sufficiency, generosity, and money without flattening it into pure tactics.
Useful for translating vision into rhythms, roles, meetings, and concrete next actions.
Software, workflows, and practical utilities that have earned a place in regular use.
Some links in this section are referral links. They may give you a discount or benefit, and I may receive compensation if you use them.
The practice management platform I use for scheduling, forms, charting, client communication, and running the administrative side of care.
An AI scribe and clinical documentation tool I use to reduce the administrative load around visit notes.
A text expansion tool I use for saving repeated language, reducing typing, and making everyday administrative work less repetitive.
I use Codex for most of my AI-assisted work: building, editing, organizing files, maintaining sites, and turning ideas into usable artifacts. I use ChatGPT much less often now, mostly as another general chat surface when I need it.
I prefer Claude Code for most deeper work with files, code, writing projects, and local knowledge. I use Claude for quick chats and shorter tasks, and Claude Cowork belongs in this same family of file-and-project-based AI work.
The local knowledge base where I keep notes, drafts, references, practice thinking, and the raw material that later becomes writing or tools.
The hosting platform I use for small static sites and public tools.
The place I use to keep code, site files, and small tool projects versioned and connected to deployment.