✊🏼 Join the Task Management Rebellion


In this edition of Practical PKM:

  • 💡 The Big Idea: A simple system for break free from the tyranny of the task manager
  • 😎 Something Cool: A big update to one of my favorite writing plugins
  • 📚 My book notes from The 5 Resets by Dr. Aditi Nerurkar

If you prefer to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser, click here.

💡 The Big Idea: Your Task Manager Shouldn’t Be a Task Master

There are a million different approaches to task management.

Which means there are a million different task managers out there.

Most of these task managers utilize different methods for parsing task metadata (i.e., due dates, contexts, etc.) to give you a list of what to do when.

Which sounds promising. After all, why not let the computer worry about all the complicated details?

The problem is when we just blindly accept what the task manager tells us to do. Which, sadly, happens much more frequently than it should. And as our to-do lists continue to grow, we inevitably arrive at a point where it’s impossible to keep up with everything we “need” to do.

Somewhere along the line, our task managers became taskmasters. And it's time to fight back with intention.

The Brain vs. The List

The way to overcome this is to:

  1. Consult your task manager for a list of suggestions
  2. Create a separate daily time-blocked plan

The task manager functions as The Brain and gives you a list of things to consider, while The List is a time-blocked plan of what you’re going to do when.

This results in more accurate daily plans and, ultimately, higher levels of productivity.

The key is to have a list that’s separate from the place where you’re doing the actual work. That’s why I use analog tools when planning my day. I create my time-blocked plan in a fancy notebook, then I write the 3-5 tasks I’m going to do on a notecard and prop it up on my desk.

But since I’m not relying on my task manager to give me my list for the day, I find it more helpful to have a series of essential lists that I check consistently to make sure nothing is falling through the cracks.

The Essential Lists

Here are the lists I use:

  • Ready = Things that are due or scheduled in the next seven days and therefore ready to be worked on
  • Back Burner = Things that are on deck, kind of like a holding tank, before I choose the tasks I’m actually going to work on next
  • Waiting = Things that I’m waiting for someone to do something with before I can take action on them
  • Discuss = Things I need to talk to someone about
  • Clarify = Things that I need to spend some time thinking through before I can take action on them
  • Next Week = Tasks that are due or scheduled for next week, so I can see what’s coming up
  • Later/Someday = Tasks that I want to do at some point, but not any time soon

(My inspiration for these essential lists came from Cal Newport’s ​Deep Life podcast​, where he articulated a simple 5-step productivity system to help organize your life. I’ve modified it slightly and built it all out in Obsidian. Of course 😉)

Building This Out in Obsidian

I’ve constructed these lists using a combination of dates and tags. Here are the different types of dates reflected in these queries:

  • Due date = the day something MUST be done by
  • Start date = the day something is able to be worked on
  • Scheduled date - the day I think I’m going to work on something

Most of the time, I’m just using the first two (due dates and start dates). These are kind of like due and defer dates for long-time OmniFocus users.

The tags are simple but allow me to quickly collect related tasks together. The Back Burner, Waiting, Discuss, and Clarify lists all use a single tag.

(The Waiting and Discuss tags usually involve another person. I have another workflow where I roll these up into what I call a People Note so I can see the relevant tasks before walking into a meeting. It's a bit beyond the scope of this newsletter, but I have a YouTube video on it here.)

I’ve laid out these lists in an Obsidian Canvas file, making it easy to view these essential lists (plus a few others) in one place:

The basis for these lists is a plugin called ​Obsidian Tasks​. It’s an incredibly powerful plugin that is perfect for this kind of task management workflow. It even has an API that allows you to add tasks to a specific list from anywhere in your Obsidian vault.

I have a workflow set up for this that lets me add the task using the QuickAdd plugin, and it instantly shows up on the appropriate lists based on the included metadata.

If you want to see what this looks like in action, I actually have a YouTube video that walks through the entire thing:

video preview

(If you've watched this video already, you'll notice that the screenshot looks a little different. That's because I've been playing with some new CSS to style the way tasks look on my dashboard. It's not quite done yet, but I will share it when it's ready. 😉)

How It All Works

While the setup is a little tricky, I’ve done my best to make the workflow as simple as it can be:

  1. Add tasks when I think of them using the QuickAdd command, and have them get added to the essential lists
  2. Review the essential lists daily when making my time-blocked plans
  3. Select the things I want to work on and block the time for those tasks

I’ve eliminated as much friction as possible in the daily use of this workflow, and I’ve been using it myself full-time for about the last year.

It’s the first time I’ve really felt that my task management workflow has really clicked. I can confidently say this is my ideal task management workflow 🙂

But that doesn’t mean it’s perfect for everyone! In order for this approach to work, you have to think a little bit differently about your tasks.

For example, if you rely on notifications to alert you what to do when, this approach won’t work for you. I actually think this is dangerous for the reasons outlined above, though, so I’m ok with this tradeoff.

If the idea of essential lists combined with a separate time-blocked plan resonates with you, there’s a good chance you’ll love the task management workflows I’ve built into LifeHQ. It's basically a done-for-you version of the whole workflow I described here.

😎 Something Cool: A Big Update to Keep the Rhythm

Keep the Rhythm has become one of my favorite plugins, giving me detailed stats of my writing in my Obsidian vault and helping me build momentum to show up and write every day:

Recently, it got a BIG update that added a new look and several new features, including a feature I requested (the ability to combine data source filters to track writing stats only for specific folders).

It was already a great plugin, but the update makes this a must-have for anyone who wants to write in Obsidian.

📚 Book Notes: The 5 Resets by Dr. Aditi Nerurkar

It’s impossible to live a life without stress, but learning to work with your body instead of against it is key if you want to avoid burnout.

Unfortunately, not many of us know how to do that. And that’s where The 5 Resets by Dr. Aditi Nerurkar can really help.

This is a great book with a bunch of strategies to help you manage stress more effectively. On the one hand, it kind of hurts to see how bad I am at this sometimes 😂 But on the other hand, thanks to this book, I have a roadmap for helping me deal with it now.

There may not be any revolutionary new ideas here, but she does a great job explaining the causes of stress and explaining simple tactics you can use to help wrangle it.

If you want to download my mind map book notes, click here.

— Mike

Practical PKM

A weekly newsletter where I help people apply values-based productivity principles and systems for personal growth, primarily using Obsidian. Subscribe if you want to make more of your notes and ideas.

Read more from Practical PKM

In this edition of Practical PKM: 💡 The Big Idea: Want to create more? Turn off your inputs! 😎 Something Cool: An automated way to fix your tags for Obsidian 1.9 📚 My book notes from Useful Not True by Derek Sivers If you prefer to read (or listen) to this newsletter in your browser, click here. 💡 The Big Idea: Stop Collecting, Start Creating. A few weeks ago, I got to interview one of my Internet heroes, Derek Sivers, for the Focused podcast. It was an incredible conversation (one of my...

In this edition of Practical PKM: 💡 The Big Idea: My big takeaways from the Craft + Commerce conference 😎 Something Cool: All of my conference sketchnotes in one downloadable file 📚 My book notes from The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins If you prefer to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser, click here. 💡 The Big Idea: AI Will Give Creators Superpowers, Not Replace Them. I just got back from the Craft + Commerce conference last week in Boise, ID. This is by far my favorite...

In this edition of Practical PKM: 💡 The Big Idea: The best way to use AI as part of the creative process 😎 Something Cool: My speaker discount for the Macstock Conference & Expo 📚 My book notes from Stillness is the Key by Ryan Holiday If you prefer to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser, click here. 💡 The Big Idea: AI is an Excellent Creative Collaborator. Obsidian shines brightest when used as a tool for connected thought. But those connections provide the most value when...