obsidian-workflows

SKILL.md

Obsidian Workflows & Second Brain Methodology

Actionable guidance for building and maintaining a second brain in Obsidian. This skill focuses on workflows and decisions — not PARA theory (Claude already knows that).

PARA Quick Reference

Organize by actionability, not topic:

Category What Goes Here Review Cadence
Projects Active work with clear endpoints Weekly
Areas Ongoing responsibilities, no endpoint Monthly
Resources Reference materials, future interest Quarterly
Archives Completed/inactive from above Annually

When in doubt: "Does this have a deadline or clear outcome?" Yes = Project. "Is this an ongoing responsibility?" Yes = Area. Otherwise = Resource.

Key Workflows

Capture (minimize friction)

  1. Drop everything into Inbox
  2. Minimal formatting — structure comes later
  3. One idea per note (atomic)
  4. Include source and why it matters
  5. Tag as #inbox for processing

Inbox Processing (weekly review, 30 min)

For each inbox note, decide:

  • Delete — Not useful, was impulse capture
  • Archive — Useful reference but no action needed now
  • Elaborate — Add context, links, tags, then move to PARA category

Target: empty inbox weekly.

Review Cadences

Cadence Time What to Do
Daily 5 min Create daily note, review active projects, process quick captures
Weekly 30 min Process inbox completely, review all projects, update areas, clean loose ends
Monthly 1 hour Review areas, archive completed projects, check OKRs/goals, update MOCs
Quarterly 2 hours Strategic review, archive inactive resources, consolidate tags, adjust PARA

Linking Rules

The 2-Link Rule

Every new note links to at least 2 existing notes. This prevents orphans and forces context-building. Ask "What does this connect to?" before saving.

MOCs vs Dashboards

Keep these separate — they serve different purposes:

MOCs (Maps of Content) — Hand-curated navigation. Each link includes why it's connected. Create when a topic has 10+ related notes. Updated intentionally, not constantly.

Dashboards — Auto-generated views (dataview queries). Show recent activity, stats, tasks. No manual curation needed.

When to Create a MOC

  • Topic has 10+ related notes
  • Need an overview of a knowledge area
  • Connecting notes across multiple PARA categories
  • Want curated navigation (not just a flat list)

Evergreen Notes (3-Layer Pattern)

Concept notes that grow over time:

Layer 1 — Definition: What is this concept? Your own words, core explanation. Rarely changes.

Layer 2 — Related: How does this connect? 2-5 links with reasons:

## Related
- [[Event Loop]] — closures power async callbacks
- [[Garbage Collection]] — closures affect GC behavior

Layer 3 — Encounters: Real-world usage added over time:

# Encounters

## 2026-02-05 - Debugging closure scope issue
Discovered that closures in a forEach loop captured the loop variable by reference.
Link: [[TIL 2026-02-05]]

Use Outgoing Links panel to discover connections you missed.

Progressive Summarization

Refine notes just-in-time (when you revisit them, not when you capture):

  1. Capture — Full source material
  2. Bold — Key passages (10-20% of content)
  3. Highlight — Within bold (10-20% of that)
  4. Summarize — 2-3 sentence executive summary at top
  5. Remix — Create new output from distilled knowledge

Apply layers only when you return to a note for a specific purpose. Don't process everything upfront.

Integration with Plugin Commands

This skill informs all plugin commands and agents:

  • /daily-startup uses daily note workflow patterns
  • /process-inbox implements inbox processing workflow
  • /review-okrs applies review cadences to goal tracking
  • /maintain-vault ensures link health and organization
Weekly Installs
1
GitHub Stars
3
First Seen
3 days ago
Installed on
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