How to Start Using Obsidian: A Beginner’s Guide

“Over 1 million people have downloaded Obsidian—but most never get past creating their first note.”

When I first downloaded Obsidian, I stared at the screen for a good 10 minutes thinking, “Okay… now what?” I didn’t get it. No home screen, no templates, no hand-holding. Just a blank space. But once I cracked the basics, I was hooked.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through how to start using Obsidian, step by step, from installing it to writing your first connected note. If you’ve felt overwhelmed or just didn’t “click” with it right away, don’t worry—Obsidian has a bit of a learning curve, but it’s totally worth climbing.


What is Obsidian and Why Use It?

So let’s start simple: What even is Obsidian?

Obsidian is a free, local-first note-taking app that stores your notes as plain Markdown files on your own device. Unlike apps like Notion or Evernote, your data isn’t locked into a cloud. It’s yours. Forever.

It’s built for knowledge management. Think of it like a digital brain where ideas aren’t just saved but linked—meaning you can see how your thoughts connect over time.

Personally, I switched from Google Docs because everything felt scattered. Obsidian turned my chaos into a connected system. I started with notes from books I was reading, and soon I had this web of insights that actually made sense when I revisited them.


How to Download and Install Obsidian

Alright, let’s get this baby on your computer.

  1. Go to obsidian.md
  2. Click Download — pick your system (Windows, Mac, Linux)
  3. Install it like any other app
  4. Launch it and hit “Create new vault”
  5. Name your vault and choose where to save it (I went with “My Brain”—cheesy but true)

💡 Tip: Keep your vault in a synced folder (like Dropbox or iCloud) if you want access from multiple devices. No native cloud sync unless you pay for Obsidian Sync.

I remember accidentally creating two vaults when I started and getting super confused when my notes weren’t showing up. Rookie mistake. You only need one to begin with.


Getting Familiar with the Interface

When you first open Obsidian, it might look kinda barebones. That’s a feature, not a bug. Clean interface = customizable.

Here’s what you’ll see:

  • File explorer on the left (your note tree)
  • Editor window in the center
  • Graph View of all the notes in your new vault.

Some hotkeys to get comfy with:

  • Cmd/Ctrl + O – open a note
  • Cmd/Ctrl + P – command palette (your new best friend)
  • Cmd/Ctrl + N – new note

You can install themes if the look bugs you. I like the Minimal theme—super clean and easy on the eyes.


Your First Note: Folders, Links, and Markdown

Here’s where the fun starts. Go ahead, create your first note (Cmd/Ctrl + N) and type something like:

# My First Obsidian Note   
This is a test. 
Let's link to [[another note]] and see what happens!

👀 Boom. You just created a link to another note. No folders, no dragging, no mess.

You can use folders if you want to, but Obsidian is all about links. I personally bounce between tags and folders. The great thing is Obsidian is flexible, and you can create a system that works for you. Just keep in mind that Tags and links make everything findable.

Markdown is the only formatting language here. It’s super simple:

  • # = H1, ## = H2
  • **bold**,
  • _italic_,
  • - bullets,
  • > quotes

Trust me, you’ll pick it up in a day.


Using Tags and Backlinks to Connect Ideas

Here’s where Obsidian gets addictive.

Tags (#likeThis) help you group notes. I use them for moods, projects, even energy levels. For example:
#idea, #writing, #lowEnergy

But the real magic? Backlinks. When you link to another note, Obsidian keeps track of which notes link to that one. It’s like a web of your own thinking.

Click the little 🔗 icon on the right (Backlinks pane), and you’ll see all notes that reference the current one—even if you never meant them to. Super powerful.

Then there’s graph view. It’s like looking inside your brain. Honestly, I spent way too much time staring at it early on—looking for connections and just being amazed at the links that were forming.


Must-Know Features and Plugins for Beginners

Here are a few must-use features I wish someone told me about:

  • Daily Notes: Start every day fresh. I use mine as a digital journal/to-do list hybrid. Enable under Settings → Core Plugins.
  • Templates: Pre-fill common note structures. You’ll want the Templates plugin.
  • Hotkeys: Customize everything. Make it work for you.
  • Community Plugins: Go to Settings → Community Plugins → Browse—you’ll find gems like:
    • Calendar
    • Tasks
    • Templater

Just don’t install 20 plugins at once like I did. You’ll break something. Start small.


Common Mistakes Beginners Make in Obsidian

Okay, let me save you some headaches.

Mistake 1: Overusing folders
They feel safe, but they kill flexibility. Stick with linked notes and tags.

Mistake 2: Not linking ideas
You’re building a web, not a filing cabinet. Always ask, “What other notes does this connect to?”

Mistake 3: Skipping markdown
Trust me, you’ll save time if you just learn the basics up front.

Bonus Mistake: Thinking it’s supposed to make sense immediately
Obsidian grows with you. You won’t have a second brain after one day—but after 30? Game changer.


Conclusion

If you’ve made it this far, congrats—you’re officially ahead of 90% of people who downloaded Obsidian and gave up.

This app can transform how you organize knowledge, plan your day, and even reflect on your thoughts. But only if you give it some time. Start with daily notes. Link generously. Play around.

And hey—don’t forget to have fun with it. Your brain is messy. Your notes can be too.

Join me for the next post Obsidian Setup Everything You Need on Day One as the series continues.

If you want to see where it started you can always check out Obsidian – My Second Brain post.

🧠 What was your first note in Obsidian? Drop it in the comments—I’d love to see how you got started.

How I Use Obsidian Daily Notes to Actually Get Stuff Done

You ever have one of those weeks where your to-do list turns into a guilt trip? Yeah — that used to be my life. Sticky notes everywhere, five different apps with half-finished tasks, and a brain that felt like a browser with 42 tabs open. Enter: Obsidian.

I’ve talked about Obsidian before some years ago that describes what Obsidian is and why I chose it. Now I wanted to explain how I use it every day. I didn’t expect a plain-text note-taking app to change my productivity game. But it did. And it all started with one simple habit: using Daily Notes.

Let me walk you through exactly how I use them — from my morning routine to linking ideas, using plugins, and ending the day with a brain that’s not screaming at me.


🗓️ Why Daily Notes Work in Obsidian

Obsidian has this beautiful thing called Daily Notes — a note automatically named with today’s date, where you can dump your thoughts, tasks, wins, random rants — anything.

But what makes it powerful is this: it’s not just a journal. It’s a launchpad for your day and a hub that connects everything else.

At first, I just used it for to-do lists. But over time, it became the command center for my brain.


✅ My Daily Note Template (Simple, Not Fancy)

I don’t do complicated. Here’s my go-to layout:

# 📅 {{date}}

## Top 3 Tasks
- [ ] Thing 1
- [ ] Thing 2
- [ ] Thing 3

## Notes / Brain Dump
- Random ideas, quotes, thoughts here

## Meetings / Events
- 10:00 - Team stand-up
- 2:00 - Client call

## Links / References
- [[Project X]]
- [[Big Idea Notes]]

This gives me just enough structure to focus — without boxing me in.


🔗 Linking Tasks and Ideas for Seamless Flow

Before I started linking stuff, my notes felt like digital sticky notes — helpful in the moment, but gone forever two days later.

Now? I use Obsidian’s [[double brackets]] for backlinks like a pro.

Say I’m working on a course called “Side Hustle Starter Pack.” I’ll write:

- [ ] Outline lesson 3 for [[Side Hustle Starter Pack]]

Later, I can go to the Side Hustle Starter Pack note and see every time I mentioned it — all automatically. No fancy project manager needed.

I also drop little quote ideas into daily notes and link them to theme pages:

Note: Minimalism isn’t fewer apps — it’s fewer open loops. #quote [[Digital Minimalism]]

It’s like leaving breadcrumbs for my future self. And it works.


☀️ My Morning Routine With Daily Notes

Every day, I open Obsidian, hit my Templater hotkey, and boom — a fresh daily note.

Here’s my quick ritual:

  1. Sip coffee
  2. Brain dump everything on my mind
  3. Pick 3 top priorities
  4. Link tasks to their project notes
  5. Add any meetings or appointments

It clears my head faster than coffee (okay, maybe not faster… but close).


🌙 My Evening Review

This one’s subtle, but powerful.

At the end of the day, I:

  1. Check off tasks
  2. Move unfinished ones to tomorrow
  3. Write 1–2 lines of reflection
  4. Link anything that deserves a follow-up

No deep journaling. Just a soft landing for my brain. I don’t feel like I’m leaving chaos behind when I shut the laptop.


🧩 Best Plugins to Supercharge Daily Notes

Okay, here’s where things get spicy. These are the plugins that actually improved my workflow — not just added noise.

1. Templater

Automates your daily note structure. Adds dates, recurring tasks, and custom prompts. I use it to inject a consistent layout every morning without thinking.

2. Periodic Notes

This one gives you daily, weekly, and monthly notes — all nicely tied together. It’s super handy for weekly reviews and reflection.

3. Tasks Plugin

This is the one I didn’t know I needed. It lets you manage tasks across your entire vault and even filter them. For example:

``` tasks
not done
due before tomorrow
```

It’ll show every unchecked task due before tomorrow — no matter which note it’s hiding in. Game changer.

You can even get fancy and start adding tags to your tasks. For example I use #followup on tasks that need extra attention, but may not have a due date. Do collect them under one heading I have a task query that looks like this.

 tasks
description includes #follow-up not done

4. Dataview

If you’re a data nerd, this is your playground. You can turn your notes into custom dashboards, summaries, and dynamic views based on tags, dates, and frontmatter.

I’ve used it to build a weekly task board, habit tracker, and even a writing progress chart. Steep learning curve, but massive rewards.

5. Calendar

It’s not flashy — but man, it’s useful. This plugin gives you a sidebar calendar. Click on any day, and it opens the daily note. That’s it. Simple, effective, frictionless.


Bonus Plugins Worth Exploring

  • Day Planner: Perfect if you like time-blocking your day. Drag tasks into specific time slots.
  • Natural Language Dates: Type “next Friday” or “tomorrow” and it becomes an actual date. Huge time saver.
  • Kanban: Build Trello-style boards inside your vault. Great for project planning or high-level overviews.

Pro tip: Don’t install all of these at once. Start with one or two and build your system gradually. Otherwise, you’ll spend more time tinkering than thinking.


🎯 Make Daily Notes Your System

Here’s the deal — your system should serve you. Not the productivity gurus. Not the Reddit templates. You.

I use daily notes to:

  • Stay focused
  • Connect my thoughts
  • Reduce mental clutter

Some days it’s neat. Some days it’s messy. Some days I skip it altogether. And that’s okay.

If you take nothing else away from this post, take this:
You don’t need perfect. You just need consistent.


🛡️ Quick Note on Privacy

Obsidian keeps everything local by default, which is awesome for privacy. Just make sure if you’re syncing between devices, you’re doing it securely — especially if you’re logging sensitive data.


🚀 Final Thoughts

If your brain feels overloaded — start with one daily note.

Seriously. Open Obsidian, hit Cmd + P or Ctrl + P, and type “Daily Note.”

Jot a few tasks. Dump your thoughts. Link one thing. That’s it.

You’ll be shocked at how fast it turns into a habit that actually sticks.

And hey — if you’ve got your own tips, tricks, or plugin recs, hit me up or drop a comment below. I’m always down to geek out about workflows that make life just a little bit easier.

Let’s build digital brains that don’t burn us out. 🧠💪


👋 Want more?
Let me know if you’d like a walkthrough of weekly reviews, project dashboards, or even second brain setups in Obsidian. I’ve got plenty more to share.


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Happy posting!

12 Local Weekend Side Hustles You Can Start This Saturday



“More than 40% of Americans have a side hustle—and most of them start on weekends.”

That stat hit me hard while I was standing there pumping gas watching the numbers growing larger and larger with every passing second. That’s when I knew I needed a weekend gig. But not the kind that chains you to a screen or needs some online course. I wanted real, local work—something I could do right here in my neighborhood.

Over the past couple years, I’ve tested more weekend hustles than I can count—from dog walking to flipping free junk I found online. Some flopped. Others paid for gas and brunch. This article? It’s my greatest hits playlist. No fluff. Just 12 real weekend side hustles you can start as soon as Saturday morning.

1. Dog Walking and Pet Sitting for Neighbors

I started with pet sitting almost by accident. A neighbor needed someone to watch her golden retriever, and I said, “Why not?” That one gig led to four more that month—mostly just feeding, walking, and chilling on a couch watching Netflix while the dogs snored.

Start by posting in your local Facebook groups or neighborhood apps. Most folks don’t want to use apps like Rover—they’d rather trust someone local, but Rover can be a good jumping off point.

Bonus: If you’re already familiar with the neighborhood dogs, that’s instant trust points.

2. Flipping Free Stuff on Facebook Marketplace

Let me tell you, the phrase “one man’s trash…” is dead serious when it comes to local flipping. Friday nights are golden for finding “curb alerts” or free listings on Facebook Marketplace. People clean out garages or move, and they just want stuff gone.

One time I picked up a dusty end table, cleaned it with vinegar, hit it with black spray paint, and flipped it for $60 the next morning. That’s a $60 profit for maybe 90 minutes of effort.

If the item is something easily shipped, and you comfortable with being on camera, you could branch out to Poshmart and WhatNot auctions. They take a little more effort, but if you curate a good selection you can use your phone and start selling on those Platforms  as well as Facebook Marketplace.

3. Lawn Mowing or Yard Cleanup Services

This one’s a classic.  There a probably a lot of Gen-X’ers that have done this as kid.

If you’ve got a leaf blower or pressure washer? Game changer. You don’t need gear to start—some clients are fine with you using theirs. Flyers still work, especially handwritten ones. People trust that more than digital ads.

If  you would like more details on this you can check out my post How to Start a Lawn Care Side Hustle With Just $300 in Gear – And Earn $700/Day.

4. Local Gig Apps: TaskRabbit, Gigwalk, and Nextdoor

I signed up for TaskRabbit and ended up assembling an IKEA bed for a guy who tipped me with cash and cookies. These apps are full of weekend gigs—from furniture assembly to garage organizing.

Not super handy? No problem. You can get paid for errands, hauling boxes, or helping with small home projects. Nextdoor is a hidden gem for this stuff—local and trust-based.

5. Cleaning Houses on Saturdays

Cleaning might not sound exciting, but it’s profitable. I would start with offering a deep clean for busy families and you could walk away with sore arms and serious cash. Bring your own supplies (natural stuff impresses clients), and offer flat rates based on home size.

6. Running Errands for the Elderly or Busy Professionals

This one’s all about heart. Think grocery runs, package drop-offs, pharmacy pickups. I started doing it for my grandma and realized the demand is massive. Print some flyers or cards with “Errand Runner” and drop them in local community centers, community boards at your local grocery store.  You could also post on Nextdoor to get the word out.

7. Hosting a Weekend Yard Sale

This is the ultimate clutter-to-cash move. Friday night, gather your junk. Saturday morning, sell it with signs at intersections and posts in Facebook groups. Join forces with neighbors to create a block-wide sale for extra traffic.

8. Car Detailing and Mobile Car Wash Services

This side hustle smells like soap and money. People love the convenience of having their car cleaned at home. Start with waterless kits, a good vacuum, and simple packages ($25 wipe-down, $60 full detail).

9. Babysitting or Childcare

Parents love weekend sitters for date nights or errands. If you’re good with kids and responsible, word spreads fast. Bring a “kid kit” with coloring books or puzzles and you’ll stand out instantly.

10. Weekend Delivery for Uber Eats, DoorDash, or Instacart

This one’s straightforward. Focus on peak times (Friday dinner, Sunday brunch), track your best zones, and listen to podcasts while you hustle. Add snacks and napkins to your car—you’ll thank me later.

11. Renting Out Equipment or Tools

Got a power washer, cooler, or ladder? People will pay to use it. Create weekend bundles—like “Yard Work Kit: $30 includes rake, mower, blower.” Easy passive income if you’re organized.

12. Street Vending or Farmers Market Side Gigs

If you bake, build, or craft, local markets are gold. Just check your city’s vendor rules. Price things in $1, $5, and $10 amounts for quick decisions, and always have change ready.

Conclusion

You don’t need an online business or TikTok fame to make extra money—you just need a weekend and a plan. Whether it’s babysitting or flipping freebies, these local weekend side hustles are legit, doable, and profitable.

Start this Saturday. Worst case? You get fresh air. Best case? You make a few hundred bucks and kick off something bigger.

Got a local hustle that worked for you? Share it in the comments below! I’m building the ultimate community-powered hustle list.

10 Side Hustles to Avoid Doing in 2025 (And What to Do Instead)

Getting past the noise.

Since the pandemic there has been a increase interest in and around the idea of creating a passive income, or working on your side-hustle, with this new gig economy. Search on youtube and there is no shortage of vague how-to’s showing how this latest idea has generated real income.

As the economy slows and the cost of living rises, it is easy for the excitement of the moment and the lure of quick cash to influence our choices.

Which leads to the question that started it all : Are all side hustles created equal?

Absolutely not. In fact, some can waste your time, drain your energy, and leave you with nothing but regret. According to a 2024 survey by SideHustle Nation, over 35% of people said their side gig cost them more than it earned — yikes! 🚫 I’ve been there too, chasing the hype only to realize it wasn’t worth the hustle.

In this guide, I’m breaking down the side hustles to avoid in 2025, why they’re not as glamorous as they seem, and what you should focus on instead. Let’s save you time, money, and sanity—starting now.


Why Some Side Hustles Just Don’t Work Anymore

Not every opportunity is a golden ticket. Many side hustles that used to work just fine are now plagued with problems:

  • Oversaturated Markets: Too many people are trying the same thing (like dropshipping), making it harder to stand out.
  • Hidden Startup Costs: That “free” side gig might require hundreds to get off the ground.
  • Poor ROI: You’re putting in hours for pennies.
  • High Competition, Low Pay: Low barriers mean more competition and less earning potential.
  • No Long-Term Growth: Some hustles don’t teach you skills or grow with you.

The Top 10 Side Hustles to Avoid in 2025

  1. Dropshipping Generic Products from AliExpress

Selling products online without having to hold inventory sounds great! The reality is, the days of throwing up a general store with a trending electronic gadget are behind us. It is extremely difficult to find a product that is unique and in demand. Combine that with the fact you will be competing against thousands of others. This makes this side hustle difficult to become successful. Without a strong niche you will be facing a race to the bottom on price, while burning cash with paid ads. Combine that with the stress of awful shipping times, and customer service nightmares.

  • Shipping times are awful
  • Margins are thin
  • Customer service nightmares
  1. Taking Low-Paying Online Surveys

Earning money for giving your opinion might sound like easy money. But these platforms are notorious for underpaying participants. You could spend an hour filling out forms and walk away with $1 or less. Most survey sites sell your data, waste your time, and rarely offer worthwhile payouts.

  • You earn cents per hour
  • Data often sold to third parties
  1. Multi-Level Marketing (MLMs)

On the surface, MLMs might look like a legitimate business opportunity, especially when pitched by a friend. But they rely heavily on recruitment rather than real sales. The odds of turning a profit are slim, and most participants end up losing money or stockpiling products they can’t sell.

  • Heavy on recruiting, light on profit
  • Often borderline pyramid schemes
  1. Gig Apps in Oversaturated Cities

Driving or delivering for apps like UberEats or DoorDash can be convenient, but as more people flood these platforms, competition increases and pay decreases. In busy cities, you’re stuck in traffic, spending on gas, and burning out for barely minimum wage.

  • DoorDash, UberEats, etc. are flooded with workers
  • Wear and tear on your car vs. low earnings
  1. Selling Low-Quality Courses Without Expertise

The rise of “edupreneurs” has led to a flood of low-effort online courses. If you lack real experience, selling a course is a quick way to get negative reviews and refunds. Long-term, this damages your reputation and credibility.

  • Hurts your reputation
  • High refund and chargeback rates
  1. Freelance Platforms With Race-to-the-Bottom Pricing

Sites like Fiverr and Upwork are saturated with freelancers from around the world competing for the lowest price. Unless you have a standout portfolio or unique niche, you may find it hard to earn decent money.

  • Fiverr and Upwork are full of $5 gigs
  • Hard to stand out without a strong portfolio
  1. Reselling Cheap Amazon Products

Amazon reselling sounds easy: buy low, sell high. But between fees, shipping, returns, and cutthroat competition, the margins disappear quickly. You’re often competing against huge sellers with bulk buying power.

  • Competition with big sellers
  • Razor-thin profit margins
  1. Creating Low-Effort Faceless YouTube Channels

Automated or faceless YouTube channels using AI voices or stolen footage rarely last. YouTube cracks down on reused content, and without a personal brand or original perspective, growth is nearly impossible.

  • Content ID issues
  • No originality = no growth
  1. Investing in Meme Coins or Pump-and-Dump Crypto

Crypto can be exciting, but chasing meme coins and “next big things” often ends in losses. These projects are volatile, easily manipulated, and rarely backed by real value.

  • Extremely risky
  • You’re likely the exit liquidity
  1. Paid Mentorship With No Real Credentials

Beware of self-proclaimed gurus offering mentorship for thousands of dollars. Many are just marketers with no real success outside of selling the dream. Always vet your mentors before investing.

  • Many “mentors” are just marketers
  • You’re paying for recycled advice

Common Red Flags to Watch For

Before diving into any side hustle, watch for these warning signs:

  • Promises of “Guaranteed Income”: Nothing is truly guaranteed.
  • Emphasis on Recruiting: Classic MLM tactic.
  • Hidden Fees or Costs: If you have to “buy in,” be cautious.
  • Bad Reviews or Scam Accusations: Google it before you commit.
  • No Real Value Offered: If it’s not solving a problem, it’s not a business.

What Makes a Side Hustle Worth Doing

Successful side hustles share a few key traits:

  • Provides Real Value: Solves a problem or serves a need.
  • Skill Building: Helps you grow and gain marketable experience.
  • Scalability: Has room to grow over time.
  • Fits Your Lifestyle: Flexible and manageable.
  • Transparent Income Potential: You know how and when you’ll get paid.

High-Potential Side Hustle Alternatives in 2025

Instead of chasing trends, focus on high-value, sustainable options:

  • Niche Affiliate Marketing
    • Build content around your passion
    • Monetize with honest product recommendations
  • Offering Specialized Services
    • SEO, design, copywriting, consulting
    • Charge premium rates with the right skills
  • Selling Digital Products
    • eBooks, Notion templates, online courses
    • Create once, sell forever
  • YouTube Channel with Unique Commentary
    • Personality-driven content wins in the long run
  • Virtual Assistance or Remote Customer Support
    • Stable, growing demand
    • Entry-level friendly
  • Monetizing on Platforms Like Gumroad, Ko-fi, or Substack
    • Build a loyal audience and sell directly to them

Conclusion

Not all side hustles are worth your time—especially in 2025. The online world has changed, and so should your strategy. Avoid the hype, ignore the get-rich-quick promises, and look for opportunities that let you build skills, serve people, and grow over time.

Side hustling can still be powerful, but only if you hustle smart. Focus on value, not vanity. Learn before you leap. And above all, protect your time like it’s your most valuable asset—because it is.


How to Start a Lawn Care Side Hustle With Just $300 in Gear – And Earn $700/Day

I’ve had a heck of a time finding someone to mow my lawn this summer. We would have people agree, and then for one reason or another they just couldn’t complete the task. This got me thinking what would you need to start up your own lawn care service.

You wouldn’t need a landscaping truck or commercial mower to start making real money in lawn care. If you like the outdoors, have a good work ethic, capable of talking to people, a basic lawn mower, and a few hours to spare, you can start earning $60 per yard and scale to $700+ a day.

Here’s exactly how I would start, market, price, and scale a lawn care business — plus this is how I would use social media to stand out.


👟 Step 1: Get the Gear — Keep It Simple

To start, you only need three tools:

  • Push lawn mower – $200
  • Weed eater (string trimmer) – $60–100
  • Leaf blower – $40–100
  • Gas can, gloves, safety glasses – $20

💡 Tip: Buy used equipment from Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist to keep costs low.

💡 Tip: You can upgrade your equipment once you a steady customer base. Save a percentage from each job to invest in better equipment, magnetic signs for your truck or car, or various trailers for your equipment.

🛠️ Total Startup Cost: ~$300


💡 Step 2: Set Your Price and Daily Goal

Set your base rate at $60 per lawn, which includes mowing, trimming, and cleanup.

A solo operator can reasonably aim for:

  • 12 lawns per day x $60 = $720/day
  • Even part-time: 3 lawns/day = $180/day, or $900/week

This is a volume-based hustle — speed and consistency are your moneymakers.


🧭 Step 3: Pick the Right Neighborhoods

Look for middle-income suburban neighborhoods where:

  • Yards are too big to mow by hand
  • Homeowners are busy or elderly
  • HOA contracts aren’t in place

Drive around your area and take notes. The best leads are often the slightly overgrown lawns in otherwise clean neighborhoods.


📢 Step 4: Local Marketing That Works

Here’s how to land your first clients fast — without paying for ads:

📝 Door Flyers or Hangers

  • Simple, clean flyer
  • Offer: “$60 Lawn Service — Mow, Trim, Blow”
  • Include your name, phone, and town

💬 Facebook Groups

  • Post in neighborhood or “Buy/Sell/Trade” groups
  • Share before/after pics and offer first-mow discounts

📍 Google Business Profile

  • Create a free listing
  • Add keywords like “Lawn mowing in [Your City]”
  • Ask every client to leave a review

🧠 Word of Mouth

Tell your family, barbershop, or church group — referrals can scale you faster than any ad.


🧾 Step 5: Onboarding, Estimates & Billing

Make it easy for clients to hire you and pay you. Here’s how:

✉️ Quick Estimate Template (Email/Text)

Hi [Client Name],

Thanks for reaching out! I offer lawn mowing, trimming, and blowing for $60 per visit.

No contracts required — just let me know your address and preferred day, and I’ll get you on the schedule.

Thanks!
[Your Name]
[Your Number or IG Link]

💵 Payment Options:

  • Cash – Reliable, no fees
  • Check – Good for older clients
  • Venmo / CashApp / Zelle – Instant, free
  • PayPal – Trusted but includes small fees
  • Square – For credit/debit cards

🧾 Invoice Methods:

  • Leave a paper invoice at the door
  • Use free apps like Wave or Invoice Simple
  • Email invoices via Google Docs template

🛠️ Step 6: Deliver 5-Star Service

Quality service = repeat business and referrals.

Focus on:

  • Crisp mow lines
  • Clean edging
  • Clear walkways
  • Showing up on time
  • Sending a follow-up thank-you text or message

📸 Pro Tip: Take before/after photos for marketing!


🎥 Bonus Step: Record Your Lawn Care Journey for Social Media

Documenting your work is a great way to build trust, land clients, and grow a loyal audience.

It can also be a source of income as well, yard work videos are popular – the crazier the yard, the more views you will most likely get.

Start accounts on:

  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube Shorts
  • Facebook Business Page

🎬 Suggested Video Structure:

  1. Quick Intro Voiceover:
    “Today I’m cleaning up an overgrown yard in [City]. Let’s get to it.”
  2. Before Walkthrough:
  • Pan the yard
  • Describe the challenge: tall grass, overgrown edges
  1. Action Footage:
  • Mowing in patterns
  • Trimming edges
  • Blowing off debris
  • Bagging clippings
  1. After Walkthrough:
  • Show clean mow lines and walkways
  • Add voiceover: “Took 45 mins. Another happy customer!”

🎥 Example video: Watch on YouTube

Use captions, trending music, and hashtags like #lawncare #beforeandafter #smallbusiness.


🔁 Final Thoughts: From Side Hustle to Full-Time Gig

Lawn care is one of the most underrated side hustles out there. It’s physical, honest work — and highly profitable if you systemize your routes, pricing, and service.

Start small. Be consistent. Market smart. And who knows — your weekend hustle might become your full-time freedom. Let me know if you start one, I could use a reliable lawn service.

Top 10 Saturday Morning Cartoons of the 80s That Defined a Generation

The 1980s were the golden age of Saturday morning cartoons, a time when kids would wake up early, grab a bowl of sugary cereal, and settle in for hours of animated adventures. Networks were in fierce competition, leading to some of the most iconic and beloved cartoons of all time. From action-packed heroics to wacky comedy, the 80s delivered unforgettable animated series that still resonate with fans today.

Here’s a nostalgic look back at the Top 10 Saturday Morning Cartoons of the 1980s that made weekends magical.


1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987-1996)

Cowabunga, dude! When four mutant turtles trained in ninjutsu burst onto TV screens in the late 80s, they became an instant pop culture phenomenon. Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello, and Raphael fought crime in New York City, battling the evil Shredder, Krang, and the Foot Clan while cracking jokes and eating pizza.

Why It Rocked:

  • Epic mix of action, humor, and catchy one-liners
  • A toy line and comic series that fueled its success
  • Gave kids a love for pizza, ninjas, and sewer lairs

👉 Fun Fact: The show was so influential that it led to live-action movies, video games, and a franchise still thriving today.


2. Transformers (1984-1987)

“More than meets the eye!” The Autobots vs. Decepticons battle took over Saturday mornings as kids watched Optimus Prime, Megatron, Bumblebee, and Starscream wage war. It wasn’t just a cartoon; it was an epic sci-fi saga with surprisingly deep storytelling for a toy-based series.

Why It Rocked:

  • Giant robots transforming into vehicles—what’s not to love?
  • Intense battles and an unforgettable theme song
  • Spawned the legendary 1986 animated movie

👉 Fun Fact: The Transformers franchise is still alive today with movies, comics, and new animated series keeping the legacy going.


3. He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (1983-1985)

“By the power of Grayskull, I HAVE THE POWER!” This sword-and-sorcery-meets-sci-fi series featured Prince Adam transforming into He-Man, the most powerful man in the universe, battling the villainous Skeletor to protect Castle Grayskull.

Why It Rocked:

  • A unique mix of fantasy, mythology, and futuristic tech
  • Skeletor’s legendary insults made him an unforgettable villain
  • Encouraged kids to shout catchphrases while wielding toy swords

👉 Fun Fact: He-Man’s toy line influenced the show’s creation, not the other way around.


4. G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983-1986)

“Knowing is half the battle!” This military-themed action cartoon pitted the G.I. Joe team against Cobra Commander and his band of terrorists in explosive battles filled with gadgets, vehicles, and epic missions.

Why It Rocked:

  • Introduced kids to teamwork, strategy, and military heroism
  • Every episode had an educational PSA at the end
  • Diverse characters like Duke, Snake Eyes, and Storm Shadow

👉 Fun Fact: The show was so successful that Cobra Commander’s voice actor (Chris Latta) also played Starscream in Transformers.


5. The Smurfs (1981-1989)

These blue, three-apples-tall creatures lived in a magical village, constantly outwitting the evil wizard Gargamel. Their simple yet charming adventures became one of the longest-running cartoons of the decade.

Why It Rocked:

  • Cute, family-friendly stories with life lessons
  • Distinct personalities for each Smurf (Brainy, Jokey, Hefty, etc.)
  • A theme song you either loved or found annoyingly catchy

👉 Fun Fact: The Smurfs were originally comic book characters from Belgium, dating back to 1958.


6. DuckTales (1987-1990)

“Woo-oo!” Scrooge McDuck and his nephews, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, went on globe-trotting treasure hunts in this action-packed Disney classic. The mix of adventure, comedy, and amazing animation made it a fan favorite.

Why It Rocked:

  • Indiana Jones-style treasure hunting made every episode exciting
  • The theme song is still one of the catchiest of all time
  • Introduced fan-favorite characters like Launchpad McQuack

👉 Fun Fact: DuckTales inspired a 2017 reboot that was just as beloved as the original.


7. Thundercats (1985-1989)

“Thundercats, HO!” This sci-fi/fantasy series followed Lion-O and his team as they escaped their dying planet to settle on Third Earth, battling the evil sorcerer Mumm-Ra.

Why It Rocked:

  • A blend of action, mysticism, and futuristic battles
  • The Sword of Omens was one of the coolest weapons in cartoons
  • Epic animation style that still looks great today

👉 Fun Fact: The show’s intro sequence remains one of the best animated intros ever made.


8. Alvin and the Chipmunks (1983-1990)

This revival of the classic Chipmunks introduced kids to Alvin, Simon, and Theodore’s hilarious antics under the watchful eye of their manager, Dave.

Why It Rocked:

  • Musical covers of pop hits made it stand out
  • Alvin’s mischief and Dave’s iconic “ALVIN!!!” yell were legendary
  • Spawned multiple movies and a resurgence in popularity

👉 Fun Fact: The Chipmunks covered 80s hits, making them mini rockstars for kids.


9. Muppet Babies (1984-1991)

A preschool-friendly version of the Muppets, this show used wild imagination sequences to take Baby Kermit, Miss Piggy, and the gang on epic fantasy adventures.

Why It Rocked:

  • Encouraged creativity and imagination
  • References to classic movies like Star Wars and Indiana Jones
  • Sweet, wholesome storytelling with humor for all ages

👉 Fun Fact: The show never showed Nanny’s face, only her striped socks!


10. Ghostbusters (The Real Ghostbusters) (1986-1991)

Inspired by the 1984 movie, this animated series followed Egon, Ray, Peter, and Winston as they battled ghosts with their proton packs. It was surprisingly dark at times, but always exciting.

Why It Rocked:

  • Featured tons of cool ghosts and supernatural creatures
  • Gave Slimer a bigger role, making him a kid-favorite
  • Had a mature tone compared to other cartoons

👉 Fun Fact: The show was called “The Real Ghostbusters” to avoid confusion with another Ghostbusters cartoon.


The 80s defined Saturday morning cartoons, and these shows shaped childhoods with their mix of action, comedy, and adventure. Which of these cartoons was your favorite? 🎞️🍿

It smells like Failure and Crowdstrike

On July 19th 2024 there was a unexpected impact to all sectors of the economy,
I know this firsthand, as I was on call when this happened, which put me on the front line working to clean up the mess this caused in our Citrix environment. It made for a crazy morning and being bleary eyed from a late night downtime that pushed me to a 22 hour day, and only getting a 2 hour nap before getting a call from our help desk related to this issue at 4 AM.

By then it was determined it was Crowdstrike that was causing the issue, what was the issue Crowdstrike released a standard update to its vulnerability scanner Falcon Sensor that wrecked havoc across three continents, the US, Australia and the UK by causing Microsoft Windows 10 and 11 PC’s to blue-screen. This had an immediate and cascading effect as airlines, shipping ports, government agencies, banks, business unable to process transactions, take online sales, emergency call centers and hospitals slowly grind to a halt.

We were busy as we had multiple tracks of work being done at the same time. We had the analysis of the problem and determining the number of business systems, I.E. backend applications that were affected, and trying to determine how many our of end users’ desktops were impacted.

We had immediate triage going on, as well as health checks of systems to validate they had not been impacted.

All this while members of various teams struggled to access the environment since their PCs / Laptops were also among the causalities of the incident.

It took several hours to understand the scope of the problem, but once it was determined to use our well thought out DR process.
We were able to implement it rather quickly. We were able to return our uses to production by the end of the day, an achievement that shows how all teams pulled together to address this unprecedented problem. It also shows that the investments that were made in our DR environment and procedures showed how critical they can be in a crisis.

I’ve had a couple days to recover, and I have a fresh cup of coffee and I’m thinking about the incident and what the fallout might be.

The Who and What

Let’s start with what is this company, for those who might not know CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. is an American cybersecurity technology company based in Austin, Texas. It provides cloud workload protection and endpoint security, threat intelligence, and cyberattack response services.

It helped the US Department of Justice to charge five Chinese military hackers with economic cyber espionage against U.S. Corporations, and uncovered the activities of a group connected to Russia’s Federal Security Service that conducted intelligence operations against global targets, primarily in the energy sector.

Crowdstrike went public on the Nasdaq in June 2019 and joined the S&P 500 index in June 2024

Crowdstrikes stock prices followed an inverse curve going lower than more and more recognizable brands/companies reported outages. Microsoft reported that 8.5 Million devices were affected,. Microsoft has released an usb recovery tool that will help quickly recovering impacted machines via a bootable USB Drive. (Additional BitLocker Key Modification)

The obvious logistical problem in this work from home world is how do we get a qualified person in front of the PC to perform the corrective action?

Companies far and wide are scrambling to do just that.

QA Sucks …

This shows how large of a market share, both Microsoft and Crowdstrike command, and that is the problem.
Crowdstrike has become a single point of failure for the economy, capable of quickly degrading all services that it touches.

The balance between being agile to identify and close potential cyber attack vectors and quality control is tough for any organization. Yet that is what is required, and perhaps what customers should demand.

“This incident appears to be a severe failure of quality control, not a malicious act,” cybersecurity strategist and former FBI counterintelligence official Eric O’Neill said of Friday’s paralysis.

Quality Assurance isn’t sexy, you can’t sell QA. Its very purpose is to slow down, create repeatable testing procedures which should ensure that bad code doesn’t make it out the door. It is a cost center, and it is one of the first areas that are examined when cuts need to be made.

In 2023 an employee reported round of layoffs, of 200 people at crowdstrike with a RTO (Return to Office) policy being cited as the reason. This included engineers, devs and QA testers.

A Glassdoor post from September 2023 sums up the work culture as:

The focus on “world domination” has created a noticeable difference in morale and business operations. People and process first culture has taken a backseat to being the biggest, fastest and strongest security provider. More burnout, more patchy solutions to quickly solve problems that could have been superbly implemented with proper communication and expectations set on timing.

and a follow up post on January 2024 has listed the following reasons for missteps the company was suffering from.

Absolutely toxic senior leadership; no emotional IQ, no communication, immature “leadership”

  • *The culture can best be described as: old boys club, bro, and/or a fraternity
  • *Re-org after re-org with no clear direction beyond the bottom line
  • *CAO (Counter Adversary Operations) makes absolutely no sense and is confusing internally and externally —
  • *Rolling layoffs with zero transparency and blatant lies (lies about why people were laid off, firings disguised as layoffs, false promises that “this is the last one”)
  • these layoffs deemed critical functions “redundant,” which led to critical work being piled on top of burned out, understaffed, and underpaid folks left behind

These and other posts paint a picture of a company that shifted the responsibility of QA from a dedicated team to the engineers writing the code. With inadequate testing of the full package before deploying to the world. Which leads to the issue we all experienced on Friday.

Hindsight is 20/20, and this is just my opinion, but all the signs show that the Leadership lost sight of its purpose, it grew too fast and there wasn’t the experience at the C-Suite required to see the cliff it was heading for. This is a management problem that goes to the core of the business and its culture.

They slashed its QA safety net, they shuffled the deck chairs on the ship enough that the employees felt lost and without clear direction.

We can’t and shouldn’t be trusting any third party company. This is gut check time. A 3 billion dollar (2023 revenue) company took shortcuts to save 50 cents, and the impact is still being assessed. It’s time that some safe guards be put in place. As everyone who uses this software should be looking for more control over when and how these updates are deployed.

Using automated processes to push these updates to critical systems needs to be re-evaluated, and those impacted should be looking at performing its own Quality Assurance before deploying these updates to their production environments.

Mistakes were made …

Yet as employees stress about the layoffs that will surely come, lets not forget that CEO George Kurtz and his 46 Million dollar salary package (a 237:1 Ratio when compared to the Median Employee Pay) created and promoted this frat bro culture and the stock holders should take a look at the leadership that was responsible for the decisions that lowered the stock price and work to restructure the company that can better manage the responsibility it finds itself now holding.

As its stock prices decline, and the lawsuits pile up, Crowdstrike has proven it is too big to fail, and that means it is very likely that the tax payers will bear the burden for this failure.

Coffee cup runneth dry….

I’m out of coffee, and it’s time for some more.

Next week will be interesting and maybe we will hear more about Crowdstrike in the coming days.

Happy Sunday!

Obsidian – My Second Brain

Twenty-plus years ago, I read an article detailing one professor’s experiment on creating a database system that cataloged his life. He had a team of assistants digitizing his calendar, photos, receipts, and journal entries. From this he could review a day a year from now and know there was a sale on Twinkies at the local gas station.

It was an interesting idea, and I had time on my hands, so I started trying to build a similar system. I fired up a database and a web server and started creating my version of this Second Brain. I quickly discovered that it wasn’t ready for hobbyist at least not for this hobbyist, digital cameras were priced for professionals, and scanners were just as expensive, the workflow just wasn’t there yet, we didn’t have decent cameras in our phones, no apps that tie everything we do together, no it was difficult since it relied on me scanning, cataloging, and linking the data. It just became too much. Although the idea stuck with me – still does.

Then there was Evernote – this application had everything, multiple platform support, offline folders, syncing between devices no matter what the underlying OS was. Evernote became my second brain. It had web page snippets of technology reviews, how-to on everything from drywall repair to how to build a water sprinkler for your kids out of PVC pipe. It was how I tracked and reported on project and tasks for work. I enjoyed this application so much that its yearly cost was paid for without review or thought.

Time rolled on and the platforms age began to show. Offline folders went away and became more of a web application. This next point isn’t the application’s fault, but my 9 to 5 blocked communication at the firewall, so it wasn’t as useful for work anymore. The web snippet may work, it may not depend on factors I couldn’t determine. It was aging – reviewing past notes was difficult, the search functionality was limited. Which means it is living on life support – and it was time to look for something different.

Obsidian to the rescue. This software is a powerful knowledge base application that uses a local folder of plain text Markdown files. The benefit of this is the markdown language is simple to use. I’ve just started working with it and in the past month I’ve incorporated it into my daily routine. It is literally the first thing I open to plan my day. With a growing number of community plug-ins, I’m able to quickly get my day planned using templates and mermaid charts. I’ve used dataview and the tagging system to create custom datasets for my daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly tracking. With its built in PDF export function, I can quickly generate a weekly report for my boss, or an agenda for the regularly scheduled One on One review. So far, I’ve been able to keep track of meetings, and project status and daily re-occurring tasks with ease just by using the tags and dataview plugins.

I just finished creating a vault for my achieved data (2010 thru 2017) and I look forward to importing in the rest of my Evernote data, so I can see the links and patterns that emerge from years of data collection. Obsidian is a tool that allows me to see the connections between my interest, hobbies, work and family in a way that Evernote just couldn’t do. If you are looking for a way to manage everything that life throws at you, I recommend looking at Obsidian. After a small learning curve, you could create your own personal second brain.

The image below is a graph of the data so far – looks very PlanetTash to me.

Retro Review – Alpha Flight

It was the 70’s, I lived in the smallest of small towns back then. Even at the young age of 5 and 6 I rode my big wheel up and down our street like I owned it. I had a best friend named Shawn. Like most young kids, it didn’t take much for us to become that way. It was Kindergarten, the first time I was able to join my older brother on the bus. I was excited, Tom not so much, while I don’t remember what Tom had said but it was probably him telling me where to sit or some such older brother power play , but I do remember Shawn telling this older kid – “YOU can’t talk to him like that.” I knew I liked him right away, and sat next to him. It turned out we were in the same class. Not surprising since there was probably only one or two kindergarten classes – so the odds were in my favor. I did say this was the smallest of small towns didn’t I.

For the next four years we were pretty much inseparable, I can remember him pulling his red wagon behind him on a Saturday morning when we would watch cartoons, old Godzilla movies, and our favorite old kung-fu movies which invariably got us kicked outside as we jumped off the back of the couch attempting to perform the perfect flying kick. It was with this friendship that i got my first taste of comic books, you see that was what was in the wagon. We would thumb through the latest comic books he had gotten and talk about what we liked about each character. Those Saturday’s were good times.

So I’ve liked comics from an early age, from the time I learned to read, comics were the thing for me. I tell you this, because when I pick up a comic there is a part of me that remembers those Saturday mornings, and how the art and colors use to draw me in. We are all still kids on the insides when it comes to certain things. For me comic books is one of those things that for a moment can take me back to simpler times a more innocent time.

Over the years, I have gathered a small collection and recently I felt the urge to re-read some of my favorite’s and share what memories I have of them, and how I feel about them today.

So we are going to start with Alpha Flight vol 1. Issue 1. Aug 1983.

Creative Team

Created by John Bryne

Lettered by Joe Rosen

Colored by Andy Yamchus

The first issue of Alpha flight was double sized, and even that isn’t big enough for the story that is contained inside these pages. Even after all these years I’m still drawn into the story.

The first page introduces us to James Hudson, Code Named Vindicator, standing in a dismantled room, with these powerful words – “you are witnessing the death of a dream.”

We are quickly given the run down on the situation, the Government funded Department H is shutting down, and without funding Canada’s hero’s are left out in the cold. As Vindicator flies off from the now defunct Department H contemplating how he is unemployed, and only has his wife’s salary to live off.

We are taken to to a isolated area some 2000 miles from Parliament Hill where a lonely tent and small fire is burning with a thin man muttering about how he will show them they were wrong. He gets up and begins walking dragging one foot, slowly making a shape in the melting snow as he goes.

Now with the threat hinted at, we switch back to introducing the team members, first up is Dr. Michael TwoYoungmen, who is a member of Alpha Flight as Shaman.

4 pages are dedicated to introducing us to the next members of Alpha Flight, Aurua who suffers from multiple personality disorder. Her super hero persona is flirty and carefree, and her Jeannie-Marie is much more restrained, libriain / school teacher look. Her brother NorthStar is a famous and it is made plain that he has used his powers to get him there. These two are the speedsters of the group and most likely the most complicated characters of the book.

We move on to Mariane, Puck, Snowbird and Sasquatch. With the introductions complete we move into the action, as we meet Tundra, a massive mountain size evil brought to life and composed of the very earth he walks on.

Each of the team members attempts to use their skills to attach the problem, Sasquatch uses his incredible strength to rip large chunks out of the creature, Vindicator’s uses his suit to electro magnetic pulse but as Tundra screams out in pain, the ground begins to split and crack open for miles around him.

The twins begin to literally fly circles around tundra and doing so the erode Tundra’s mass, which gives Shaman an idea and he calls forth a deluge of rain. this weakens their foe, but it wasn’t enough, just then they see a water spout in the distance, it is Marina as she attempts to reach her team mates. she is controlling the spout and using it as transportation.

Vindicator flies off to retrieve her, and allowing shaman to pull the water down around tundra, eroding him with a deluge of Salt water and creating a new salt water lake in the process.

The Team is hanging out at Hudson’s house, and there is debate on what to call themselves and after some discussion it was decided that they will stick with Alpha Flight.

Thoughts

This first issue flows like a movie, building tension as it goes. while the threat was easily defeated, the story served it’s purpose and quickly introduced the team members and gave a good hint at the powers each of them had.

When I was younger this was a chance to get in on the ground floor, John Bryne was known to me from his other work in Marvel. After this book he quickly became one of my Top 5 favorites working at Marvel at the time. This was a brand new team, and it was exciting to hold the first issue in my hands. While the art style wasn’t attempting to break any new ground, it was good ole fashioned story telling that drew you in month after month.

This wasn’t known to me at the time, but now makes it even more remarkable. This team of super-hero’s was created as a one off. They were just a group for the X-men to fight to move the wolverine story along. John Bryne only reluctantly took the book on for reasons only those at marvel at the time may know. While he has said in interviews that working on the book was hell. It proves that he is a professional, and you couldn’t tell by his work that he hated it that much. Probably all the more maddening for him was that the fans loved his work on this book, myself included.