Just wanted to talk about the only separation I have in my workflow. Obsidian was a game changer for me when I discovered it a couple of years ago. Suddenly remembering and following up on thoughts was a game, and even more excitingly, a collection.

I fell off the productivity bandwagon a few months after. When I returned to the software about a month ago, the first thing I did was identify what went wrong the last time. Aside from going too crazy with community plugins towards the end, I believe my primary pain point was keeping all of my tasks readily at hand. Frequently I would write something to do in my daily note only for it to be lost and never followed up on. I would return to a note and see either a task I had completely forgotten about or a task that was later duplicated somewhere else in my vault.

This time around I have had a lot of success using a different utility specifically for tasks. This is not a Todoist sub so I won’t go into detail but it’s absolutely the missing piece of the puzzle. I try to minimize time from thought to writing, but this tiny bit of extra friction to categorize between “want to do” and “want to know” was a big help.

Curious on other peoples’ thoughts on this! I know some people do absolutely everything in Obsidian. What has worked for you and what hasn’t in terms of keeping your action items readily at hand?

  • another_kbin_addict@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s interesting to read this as I move my tasks from Things into Obsidian (experimenting)

    Maybe l’ll report back and LYK. 😆

    I do think it’s important to carve out the cruft. Maybe Tasks/Todos is cruft for you, and some other facet of the app is for another. It’s interesting to me!

    • nietscapeOP
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      11 months ago

      Do so, I always love to hear the different ways people have their workflows set up!

      “Carving out the cruft” is a great way to put it! And I agree, I think it’s really interesting that there is really no “right answer” to this question. Everybody’s mind works a little differently and some systems will work for them while others won’t.

      Good luck on your experimenting! I’m glad I finally found something that works for me, and I hope you do too :)