
Start with four folders or tags—Projects, Areas, Resources, Archives—inside a free tool like Obsidian, Notion, or Google Drive. Keep names short, move items weekly, and limit projects to what fits your calendar. This constraint creates momentum, exposes priorities, and protects attention from expensive complexity and indecision.

Capture, Organize, Distill, Express becomes a tiny checklist parked in your daily note. Capture two actionable highlights, organize them into PARA, distill one golden sentence, express one small deliverable. Five focused minutes beat sprawling marathons, preserving energy and progress even when time, tools, or budgets feel painfully constrained.

Choose defaults that outlast apps: write in plain text or Markdown, favor portable links, and snapshot key decisions. When a service changes pricing, your knowledge remains intact. A second brain grows stronger by surviving tool swaps, which is the most affordable insurance available to creators.

Start with a vault on local storage or synced via a free cloud. Use daily notes, backlinks, and lightweight frontmatter to standardize titles, authors, and statuses. The graph becomes useful only because your filenames, links, and tags speak a consistent, portable language.

Create one Projects database and one Resources database. Keep properties minimal: status, next step, link to source, and owner. Templates prefill checklists and contexts. With rollback history and sharing included, the free tier can handle serious work for individuals and scrappy teams.

Adopt a YYYY-MM-DD prefix for dated notes and decisions, plus two or three-word slugs. Search becomes magical because names carry meaning. Shared folders mirror PARA, so collaborators instantly understand where items live, even if they have never seen your system before.
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