Work Decoded

I’m a Working Mom Who Uses AI to Save 10 Hours a Week. I’m Tired of the Backlash.


A little over a year ago, AI quietly slipped into my parenting communities.

I’ve actually been using AI at work for about six years. Back then, it was met with heavy skepticism, and nobody was bringing it home. Fast forward to about 18 months ago, and parents suddenly realized they could use it to maximize efficiency and buy back their personal time. At first, it was just the tech and marketing parents. Today, moms and dads with zero tech experience are using it.

When we started, there was no shame. But as public opinion around AI exploded, that shifted.

Now, I find myself being judged for using a tool that saves me at least 10 hours every single week. Frankly, I’m tired of the backlash. Here is how I actually use it to keep my household running.

It Masterminds Our Family Schedule

Managing our calendar used to take up my entire Sunday. My husband and I both work from home (he does so two days a week), and we don’t have organized childcare. Instead, we piece together a complex puzzle: transition school for our daughter twice a week, music and gym classes, and alternating our own working shifts. If we both have a meeting, I have to sync with a babysitter. It’s an exhausting mental load.

To fix this, I started using Claude. I fed it our individual work schedules, our daughter’s routine, and community events like local library calendars.

It now acts as our personal assistant:

  • Automated Syncing: Claude reads all of our disparate Google Calendars.

  • Smart Scheduling: It automatically reaches out to our babysitters with recommended time slots based on their historical preferences.

  • Custom Dashboard: It compiles everything into a beautiful, color-coded HTML calendar.

We deploy this schedule to a password-protected website via Netlify. If a plan changes, I type it in, the site updates automatically, and it emails everyone the new link. What used to take hours of stressful coordination now takes me five minutes here and there.

It Automates Our Grocery Lists and Meal Plans

AI has taken over our meal prepping entirely. It runs a digital inventory of our pantry so it knows exactly what we have in stock. Even better, it’s completely customized to our family’s health: it knows my husband and daughter are celiac, and it even accounts for my husband’s recent blood work results.

Using that data, it designs our weekly meal plan and curates a shopping list. I’ve connected it to DoorDash and Uber Eats so the groceries are ready to order. While you can automate the actual purchase, I still prefer to give the list a quick review before hitting "pay."

It Tracked My Daughter’s Development

Childhood milestones can terrify parents because we aren’t always taught that development happens in ranges. When my daughter was a baby, I set up an AI project to research exactly what milestones she should be approaching.

Instead of panic-searching Google, I asked the AI for a weekly list of fun, developmental activities we could do together to support her growth. We printed the list out and checked off the activities as we did them. By the time we walked into the pediatrician's office for check-ups, we were entirely prepared. It completely shifted the dynamic, allowing us to have empowered, collaborative conversations with our doctor.

AI Buys Me Time With My Child

When I step back into mom communities and hear people raging against AI, it’s hard for me to take the criticism seriously. It is very easy to be theoretically and morally angry at technology from a distance.

But it is a completely different thing to look at a working mom, a stay-at-home mom, or a single mother struggling to balance her bills and her time, and tell her she shouldn't use a tool that lightens her mental load.

I am not ruining childhood; I am buying back time to spend with my kid.

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