My two most common:
I find I use the intuitions behind Bayes' Theorem much more often than the math. And I'm not sure I act differently by thinking with that framework so much as come to the right question faster (which yes, is acting differently).
The law of the conservation of expected evidence is a direct consequence of Bayes' Theorem, and if you internalize Eliezer's post of the subject then IMHO you get much of the expected value of internalizing Bayes' Theorem.
You may be interested in Applied Bayes' Theorem: Reading People, which is a good real life example.
I made a discussion post on Bayes' Theorem not too long ago, where I show one example of how I (mis)use it in my daily life.
Maybe you'd like my examples about ordering drugs? http://www.gwern.net/Modafinil#ordering-with-learning
I only have a tenuous grasp of Bayes' Theorem. I get the concept. But I haven't internalized it enough to make use of it in real world situations. I'm trying to decide whether it really makes sense for me to put in the effort to understanding it when I could be putting that effort into other things. I'm curious what examples people here have of making use of it in a concrete way in real life? (In particular, real life examples that weren't contingent on you being a scientist)