The Feral Fairy Almanac

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Cocktails & Caftans!

Cliffhangers & Cocktails by the Caftan Coven

I was privileged to be interviewed by these two wacky writer witches, and it was pure joy. Go and check out their podcast! I reckon it’s on YouTube, too…

Obsidian Tags vs Links: Which Should You Use?

โ€œTags and links are like peanut butter and jellyโ€”each great on its own, but when combined, they create something even better.โ€

I remember when I first started using Obsidian, I thought tags and links were basically the same thing. Just different ways to connect notes, right? Well…not quite.

Understanding when to use tags versus links can make your note-taking system way smoother and more powerful.

Letโ€™s dive into how these two features differ, when to choose each, and how you can make them work together in your vault.


Whatโ€™s the Difference Between Tags and Links?

Tags

  • Tags areย keywords or labelsย you add anywhere in your note using aย #ย symbol.
  • They categorize notes by theme, status, or any attribute you want.
  • Example:ย #idea,ย #project/obsidian-series,ย #urgent

Links

  • Links areย direct connectionsย between two notes created with double bracketsย [[Note Title]].
  • They create a clickable relationship that lets you jump from one note to another instantly.
  • Example:ย [[Project Launch]],ย [[Daily Notes/2025-05-20]]

When to Use Tags

Use tags when you want to:

  • Addย broad categories or themesย that apply across many notes.
  • Markย attributes or statuses, likeย #todo,ย #in-progress,ย #reference.
  • Group notes that donโ€™t have a hierarchical relationship but share a common trait.
  • Quicklyย filter and searchย by category without creating new notes.

Example:

Youโ€™re writing journal entries. You tag each with #journal and #mood/happy. Later, you can filter all โ€œhappyโ€ mood entries without linking every single one.


When to Use Links

Use links when you want to:

  • Createย specific, explicit connectionsย between notes.
  • Referenceย related ideas, projects, or resourcesย directly.
  • Build aย network or graphย of ideas that you can navigate.
  • Connect detailedย research or project notesย that depend on each other.

Example:

Youโ€™re writing about a project and link to your meeting notes, task lists, and key concepts inside the project note. This helps you jump around quickly and keeps related info connected.


Why You Need Both for a Balanced System

Hereโ€™s the truth: tags and links arenโ€™t rivals. Theyโ€™re best friends.

Think of tags as broad buckets and links as roadways between notes.

  • Tags organize notes by category, so you know what type of note youโ€™re looking at.
  • Links build meaningful relationships, showing how ideas and notes relate specifically.

Using both lets you:

  • Quickly filter by tags, then explore deeply via links.
  • Use tags for statuses (#todo,ย #done), and links for context and detail.
  • Build a vault thatโ€™s bothย searchable and navigable.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using tags like links โ€” e.g., creating a tag for every note title. This leads to tag clutter.
  • Over-linking โ€” linking every word to another note just because you can. It makes navigation noisy.
  • Ignoring one entirely โ€” some users rely solely on folders or tags and miss the power of linked notes.
  • Inconsistent tag naming โ€” mix ofย #todo,ย #to-do,ย #taskย makes filtering painful.

How I Use Tags and Links Together

Hereโ€™s my system:

  • I tag notes with broad categories:ย #journal,ย #project/obsidian-series,ย #idea,ย #task
  • Inside notes, I link to related topics, meeting notes, or research:ย [[Meeting Notes]],ย [[Project Launch]]
  • I use nested tags likeย #status/in-progressย orย #status/doneย for task management
  • I review backlinks weekly to discover related notes I might have missed

This combo keeps my vault flexible but connected.


Conclusion

So, tags or links? The answer is simple: use both. They serve different but complementary purposes.

  • Useย tagsย for quick categorization, filtering, and broad organization.
  • Useย linksย to create specific, meaningful relationships between your notes.

Together, they unlock Obsidianโ€™s full power, turning your vault into a dynamic, interconnected knowledge base.

How to Organize Your Notes with Tags in Obsidian

โ€œTags arenโ€™t just labelsโ€”theyโ€™re a way to find meaning across your notes.โ€

When I first started with Obsidian, I thought folders alone would do the job. Spoiler alert: folders are great for structure, but they can be too rigid.

Enter tags โ€” those little #hashtags you sprinkle throughout your notes that make searching and organizing way more flexible.

Let me show you how to tag like a pro in Obsidian and why tags can be the secret weapon in your digital brain.


What Are Tags in Obsidian?

Tags are keywords prefixed by a hash # that you add anywhere in your notes:

#project #idea #urgent

Theyโ€™re easy to spot and Obsidian treats them as metadata you can filter, search, and visualize.

Unlike folders, tags let you categorize notes across multiple topics without duplication.


Why Use Tags Instead of (or Alongside) Folders?

Folders give you a fixed hierarchy โ€” a single place for a note. But ideas arenโ€™t linear, right?

Tags let you:

  • Connect notes across projects, themes, or contexts
  • Create overlapping categories (e.g.,ย #projectย andย #research)
  • Easily filter notes by tags using Obsidianโ€™s search and tag pane
  • Quickly add context to notes without moving files around

I personally combine both. Folders for broad categories, tags for dynamic sorting.


How to Add Tags in Obsidian

Simply type # and start writing your tag name. Obsidian will auto-suggest existing tags as you type, helping you stay consistent.

Example:

#journal #daily #meeting-notes

You can add multiple tags per note or even inline in the middle of sentences.


Tagging Best Practices

1. Be Consistent With Tag Names

Donโ€™t create #proj in one note and #project in another. Pick one naming style.

2. Use Hierarchical Tags Sparingly

Obsidian supports nested tags like:

#project/launch #status/in-progress

These can help organize large vaults but avoid overcomplicating.

3. Keep Tags Simple and Descriptive

Tags like #idea#todo#quote work well. Avoid too generic ones like #note.

4. Create Tag Index Notes

Some people create an index note that explains or groups tags:

# Project Tags

- #project/launch

- #project/research

# Status Tags

- #status/done

- #status/pending

This is great for teams or vaults with lots of tags.


Using Tags for Note Discovery

Obsidianโ€™s tag pane gives you an overview of all tags in your vault and how many notes use each.

You can click a tag to instantly filter all notes containing it.

You can also combine tag searches with text search:

tag:#project AND meeting

This powerful combo lets you drill down quickly.


How Tags Complement Links

Links create explicit connections between notes. Tags add flexible, broad context.

For example, you might link:

  • [[Project: Launch New Website]]ย inside your meeting notes

But tag those notes with:

  • #projectย andย #meeting-notes

This way you can group all project-related content, whether directly linked or not.


Real-Life Use Case: My Tagging System

Hereโ€™s a sneak peek into my tags:

  • #dailyย โ€” all daily notes
  • #journalย โ€” personal reflections
  • #project/obsidian-seriesย โ€” everything related to this article series
  • #ideaย โ€” random ideas
  • #taskย andย #task/doneย โ€” task statuses

When I want to review all open tasks, I search for tag:#task -tag:#task/done.

Itโ€™s like having a smart filter on autopilot.


Conclusion

Tags are your flexible sidekick in Obsidian. They help you organize, search, and discover notes without wrestling with folders.

Start smallโ€”add a few tags to your notes today. Over time, youโ€™ll see how these little hashtags build a powerful web of context that makes your vault feel alive and organized.


๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ Whatโ€™s your tagging style? Do you use nested tags or keep it simple? Share your tips and tag hacks in the comments!

Ohio Scottish Arts School is next month?

I can’t believe it’s only a month until the Ohio Scottish Games, followed by Ohio Scottish Arts School.

When I first discovered OSAS, I sought something to keep my harpist engaged with her instrument of choice. She loves a challenge!

By chance, I found harpist Ashley Lake’s knowledgeable mother, Stephanie Taylor Lake, who let me in on Luneita Cotton’s tutelage. She’s just the right teacher for GiGi, no fooling around. And even with a sweet and smart kid like GiGi, it takes a village. Ms Cotton, OSAS’ amazing community of teachers and musicians, Courtney Raines, and Doug Elmore have put so much thought and attention into this kid harpist over the past year that she has just grown in her musicianship like a weed! Make that a thistle!

Of course, there was Esperance, an all-year project requiring tons of dedication from a 13-14 year old girl. (I certainly never felt that way about the piano. Maybe ballet.) She played for Bloomington’s Burns Dinner thanks to Albert Cross, and of course, received a scholarship and so much moral support from Clan Cunningham International. Oh, let’s not forget a scholarship courtesy Clan MacLeod, a pleasant surprise!

I have always been proud of my Cunningham heritage, but I hadn’t done much in that diaspora for so long. I sincerely was thinking only of GiGi and her harp when I chose to enroll her in OSAS. It was close (okay, 6 hours away, but that was closer than some harp programs), it was within our budget, and it fit our schedule. Hey, in this family, summer revolves around Camp Piomingo, and that’s that.

But now…I’ve gotten involved with Clan Cunningham International, I’m looking forward to the Games, I’m planning on attending other games, and I seriously considered hosting a tent at a Games this very morning. Me. The Introvert.

What. A. Difference. I had room for this in my life, but I didn’t realize it. I needed this in my life, but I had no clue. Through my daughter’s interests, I found my LITERAL Clan waiting for me. The people I have met through CCI and OSAS have been awesome. It’s just what my soul needed. As we look forward to our move to Bloomington, I know we will look forward to seeing our friends again, and at multiple venues. Honestly, I want to cry when I think about it. I’m just so very happy to be included and to belong. I didn’t know my emotions could still surprise me, but there they are. #aspergirls

So, will I see you in Cleveland? Bloomington? Indianapolis? Let me know. I’ll be one of the ladies in the gorgeous red, black, and white kilts.

PS I’m moving my email newsletter to Substack, if you prefer to follow me there.

How to Link Notes in Obsidian Like a Pro

โ€œThe real magic of knowledge management isnโ€™t in storing informationโ€”itโ€™s in connecting it.โ€

In Yesterday’s post I outlined smart note taking, and provided a few examples. I spent years archiving information that I found interesting. I used to have a million notes scattered everywhere. To-do lists in one app, project ideas in another, and random book quotes floating in a dusty Google Doc.

The information was there, stagnate, most of it hardly ever looked at again after I filed it away. When I started using Obsidian I found myself doing the same thing. I had to find a new way of reviewing the data, adding my thoughts on the topics that I needed, and deleting the information that was no longer useful. The key to this step is theย Obsidianโ€™s ability to link notes, and suddenly, it clicked:ย Itโ€™s not just about what you captureโ€”itโ€™s about what/how you connect the information.

In this post, Iโ€™ll show you exactly how to link notes like a pro inside Obsidian, so you can turn a messy pile of thoughts into a powerful, idea-generating machine.


What Are Internal Links in Obsidian?

Internal links are connections between notes in your vault. You create them using double brackets:

[[Your Note Title]]

Itโ€™s like instantly teleporting between ideas.

For example, if youโ€™re journaling in your Daily Note and you mention โ€œproject X,โ€ just type [[Project X]]โ€”bam! That note is now connected.

It doesnโ€™t even need to exist yet. Obsidian creates a placeholder until you fill it in later. ๐Ÿ™Œ

You can also link to specific headings or blocks inside a note:

  • [[Project X#Timeline]]ย โ†’ links to a specific section
  • [[Project X^abc123]]ย โ†’ links to a block (handy for precise references)

What Are Backlinks?

Hereโ€™s where things get juicy.

backlink shows you where a note is being referenced fromโ€”even if you didnโ€™t manually link them.

Say you mentionย [[Atomic Habits]]ย in 5 different notes. Open the โ€œAtomic Habitsโ€ note and scroll to theย backlink paneโ€”youโ€™ll see every note that references it.

Think of it like your brain whispering: โ€œHey, hereโ€™s everything related to this idea.โ€

It’s how Obsidian creates a network of thought.


Why Linked Thinking Is So Powerful

Traditional folders trap your ideas. But linked thinking? It frees them.

Here’s what I noticed once I started linking notes:

  • Serendipity: Iโ€™d rediscover forgotten notes just by browsing backlinks.
  • Clarity: Projects stopped feeling overwhelmingโ€”I couldย seeย how everything fit together.
  • Creativity: New ideas popped out of nowhere when I linked old ones together.

Youโ€™re not just writing notes. Youโ€™re building a thinking tool.


Use Case 1: Project Management

Obsidian isnโ€™t just for writers and researchersโ€”itโ€™s a legit project management tool once you understand linking.

Hereโ€™s how I run projects:

  • [[Project: Launch New Product]]
  • Inside that note:
    • Link toย [[Meeting Notes]]
    • Link to tasks likeย [[To Do: Launch Page Copy]]
    • Embed milestones, specs, even brainstorms

I even use #status/in-progress or #status/done to filter stuff visually.

Then I review backlinks from each task to see where it was mentioned. Everythingโ€™s interconnected. No more scattered documents. Later in the series I’ll discuss and provide examples of the workflow around Projects.


Use Case 2: Research and Writing

Iโ€™m working on a long-form article? I create a master note:

[[Article: How to Build a Personal Knowledge System]]

Inside, I link to:

  • [[Quote from Tiago Forte]]
  • [[PKM Examples]]
  • [[Smart Notes Method]]

When Iโ€™m ready to write, I follow the linksโ€”itโ€™s like laying down breadcrumbs for my future self.

Obsidian helps you build out your research horizontally, not just vertically. Itโ€™s perfect for long-term thinkers.


Use Case 3: Learning and Idea Generation

Letโ€™s say youโ€™re reading a book. Instead of just dumping highlights, start linking:

  • [[Book: Deep Work]]
  • [[Concept: Attention Residue]]
  • [[Idea: 3-Hour Work Blocks]]

Now those notes start showing up in backlinks when you revisit productivity, time management, or journaling notes.

It’s like your brain slowly building a custom encyclopedia without trying that hard.


Pro Tips for Linking Like a Legend

๐Ÿ”— Use Descriptive Link Names

Instead of [[Note1]], rename it to [[Morning Routine Template]] or [[Why Deep Work Matters]].

๐Ÿง  Donโ€™t Overthink It

If a link might be useful, make it. Even if the note is empty nowโ€”itโ€™ll grow later.

๐Ÿ’ก Use Aliases for Clarity

Sometimes you want a cleaner display:

[[Atomic Habits|James Clearโ€™s Book]]

Or define aliases in the frontmatter:

aliases: ["AH", "Atomic Habits by Clear"]

๐Ÿ”„ Review Your Backlinks Weekly

Block 10 minutes to scan backlinks and follow the rabbit trails. Youโ€™ll often stumble on ideas worth expanding.


Conclusion

Linking notes in Obsidian isnโ€™t just a featureโ€”itโ€™s a superpower.

It turns random thoughts into a growing web of knowledge, projects into living documents, and your vault into an extension of your brain.

Donโ€™t worry about doing it perfectly. Just start connecting the dots.
Over time, the patterns emergeโ€”and thatโ€™s where the real magic happens.


๐Ÿ“Œย Coming up next:ย How to Use Daily Notes in Obsidian for Journaling and Planning
Discover how to supercharge your journaling and planning with Daily Notes in Obsidian. Learn how to set up daily entries, structure your thoughts, and build a consistent habit with powerful plugins and templates.

How to Take Smart Notes in Obsidian

โ€œYou don’t rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.โ€ โ€” James Clear

Hereโ€™s the truth no one tells you: taking a bunch of notes doesnโ€™t mean youโ€™ll remember anything.

When I first started using Obsidian, I dumped everything into itโ€”quotes, book highlights, web pages, random thoughtsโ€”but it quickly turned into a digital junk drawer. Iย hadย notes, sureโ€ฆ and if I could even find a set of notes following a theme or idea, I wasnโ€™t learning from them.

Thatโ€™s where smart notes come in.

Inspired by the Zettelkasten method, the idea is to write notes that think for youโ€”notes that actually connect, resurface, and help you develop ideas over time. And Obsidian? Itโ€™s the perfect tool for this, once you know how to set it up.


What Are Smart Notes, Really?

๐Ÿ“š The 3 Big Principles

  1. Capture atomic ideas
    โ†’ One idea per note. Not a brain dump.
  2. Link ideas together
    โ†’ Useย wikilinksย to connect concepts. Think like a spiderweb.
  3. Make your notes usable
    โ†’ Add yourย own thoughts, not just quotes or info. Notes are for thinking, not storing.

If youโ€™ve ever highlighted an entire page of a book and remembered none of itโ€ฆ yeah, same. Smart notes fix that.


Using Headers, Tags, and Links Like a Pro

Letโ€™s break down the Obsidian features that make smart note-taking possible.


๐Ÿงฑ Use Headers to Structure Thinking

Instead of one giant blob of text, structure your note using ###### headers. Like this:

# Idea: Social Media Kills Deep Work

## Quote "Social media is like sugar for the brain..."

## My Take This makes sense because I canโ€™t even finish a podcast without checking Twitter.

## Related Ideas - [[Deep Work Notes]] - [[Dopamine Addiction]]

Headers make it scannable later. Your future self will thank you.


๐Ÿท๏ธ Use Tags (But Donโ€™t Go Nuts)

Tags help organize by theme. Think: #productivity#philosophy#quotes.

๐Ÿ’กย Tip: Donโ€™t turn every word into a tag. Keep aย short list of core tags. I use:

  • #conceptย โ€“ for abstract ideas
  • #insightย โ€“ for notes that made me go โ€œwhoaโ€
  • #referenceย โ€“ for book/article summaries
  • #quoteย โ€“ for notable quotes
  • #todoย โ€“ for tasks I need to act on

๐Ÿ”— Link Everything Contextually

Hereโ€™s the magic sauce: donโ€™t wait to link ideas later. Link as you write.

Twitter feels like [[Slot Machine Design]] for attention. I think [[Cal Newport]] warned about this in [[Digital Minimalism]].

Itโ€™s messy. Itโ€™s fast. But thatโ€™s okay.

Every time you link, youโ€™re creating a network of ideas, not just a pile of files. Thatโ€™s what turns note-taking into knowledge building.


Linking Notes Contextually (with Examples)

Letโ€™s say you write a note about the idea of status signaling. Instead of writing:

“Instagram encourages status signaling.”

Try this:

Instagram encourages [[Status Signaling]]โ€”people post not just to share, but to look cool. This ties into [[Social Comparison]] and probably affects [[Self-Esteem]].

Now youโ€™ve connected 3 different ideas. Obsidian starts working like a mind map you didnโ€™t have to draw.


Bonus: Template for Smart Notes

Want a reusable format? Hereโ€™s one I use:

# [[Concept Name]]

## Summary Short, atomic version of the idea.

## Source Book, article, or thought origin.

## My Thoughts Your personal take, disagreement, or connection.

## Links - [[Related Idea 1]] - [[Related Idea 2]]

Create a note in your Templates folder and use the Templater plugin to drop this into new notes automatically.


Conclusion

Smart notes changed how I think. Seriously.

Now, when Iโ€™m working on a project or writing something new, I stumble across forgotten ideas I saved months agoโ€”and they still make sense. Thatโ€™s the whole point: your notes should be usable, not just saved.

So if you want your second brain to work with you instead of against you:

  • Capture one idea per note
  • Use headers and tags for structure
  • Link everything like crazy

Obsidian was made for this. You just need the right habits to make it sing.


๐Ÿ’ฌ Whatโ€™s your favorite tip for keeping your notes useful? Drop your best trick in the comments!