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PARA Methodology Guide

What is PARA?

PARA is a productivity framework for organizing digital information:

  • Projects - Short-term efforts with deadlines
  • Areas - Long-term responsibilities (no deadline)
  • Resources - Topics of interest (reference material)
  • Archive - Inactive items (completed, cancelled, on hold)

Why PARA Works

Traditional problem: Information scattered across multiple systems with no clear organization.

PARA solution: Single organizing principle based on actionability and time horizon.

Detailed Definitions

Projects (01-projects/)

Definition: Short-term efforts that you're working on now with clear goals and deadlines.

Criteria for a project:

  • Has a clear goal or outcome
  • Has a deadline or target date
  • Takes effort to complete (not a single task)
  • Active - you're working on it now

Examples:

  • "Launch new website" (deadline: March 15)
  • "Complete Q1 budget review" (deadline: Feb 28)
  • "Learn Python basics" (deadline: End of month)
  • "Organize home office" (deadline: This weekend)

Project structure:

01-projects/[work|personal]/[project-name]/
├── _index.md          # Main project file (MOC)
├── meetings/          # Meeting notes
├── decisions/         # Decision records
└── notes/            # General notes

Project frontmatter:

---
status: active | on-hold | completed
deadline: YYYY-MM-DD
priority: critical | high | medium | low
tags: [work, personal]
---

Areas (02-areas/)

Definition: Ongoing responsibilities with no end date. These define your roles in life.

Criteria for an area:

  • No deadline - ongoing indefinitely
  • Represents a responsibility or role
  • Requires regular attention
  • Contains multiple projects over time

Examples:

  • "Health" (ongoing, has projects: "Run marathon", "Eat better")
  • "Finances" (ongoing, has projects: "Tax preparation", "Investment plan")
  • "Professional Development" (ongoing, has projects: "Learn AI", "Get certification")
  • "Home & Family" (ongoing, has projects: "Plan vacation", "Renovate kitchen")

Area structure:

02-areas/[work|personal]/
├── health.md
├── finances.md
├── professional-development.md
└── home.md

Area frontmatter:

---
review-frequency: weekly | biweekly | monthly
last_reviewed: YYYY-MM-DD
health: good | needs-attention | critical
---

Resources (03-resources/)

Definition: Topics or themes of ongoing interest. Material you reference repeatedly.

Criteria for a resource:

  • Reference material, not actionable
  • Topic-based organization
  • Used across multiple projects/areas
  • Has long-term value

Examples:

  • "Python Programming" (referenced for multiple coding projects)
  • "Productivity Systems" (used across work and personal)
  • "Cooking Recipes" (referenced repeatedly)
  • "Productivity Tools" (knowledge about tools)

Resource structure:

03-resources/
├── programming/
│   ├── python/
│   ├── nix/
│   └── typescript/
├── tools/
│   ├── obsidian.md
│   ├── n8n.md
│   └── nixos.md
├── productivity/
└── cooking/

Resource frontmatter:

---
type: reference | guide | documentation
tags: [programming, tools]
last_updated: YYYY-MM-DD
---

Archive (04-archive/)

Definition: Completed or inactive items. Moved here when no longer active.

When to archive:

  • Projects completed
  • Areas no longer relevant (life change)
  • Resources outdated
  • Items on hold indefinitely

Archive structure:

04-archive/
├── projects/
├── areas/
└── resources/

Decision Tree

When deciding where to put something:

Is it actionable?
├─ Yes → Has a deadline?
│  ├─ Yes → PROJECT (01-projects/)
│  └─ No → AREA (02-areas/)
└─ No → Is it reference material?
   ├─ Yes → RESOURCE (03-resources/)
   └─ No → Is it completed/inactive?
      ├─ Yes → ARCHIVE (04-archive/)
      └─ No → Consider if it's relevant at all

PARA in Action

Example: "Learn Python"

  1. Starts as Resource in 03-resources/programming/python.md

    • "Interesting topic, want to learn eventually"
  2. Becomes Area: 02-areas/personal/learning.md

    • "Learning is now an ongoing responsibility"
  3. Creates Project: 01-projects/personal/learn-python-basics/

    • "Active goal: Learn Python basics by end of month"
  4. Generates Tasks:

    • tasks/learning.md:
      - [ ] Complete Python tutorial #learning ⏫ 📅 2026-02-15
      - [ ] Build first project #learning 🔼 📅 2026-02-20
      
  5. Archives when complete:

    • Project moves to 04-archive/projects/
    • Knowledge stays in Resource

PARA Maintenance

Weekly Review (Sunday evening)

Review Projects:

  • Check deadlines and progress
  • Mark completed projects
  • Identify stalled projects
  • Create new projects from areas

Review Areas:

  • Check area health (all areas getting attention?)
  • Identify areas needing projects
  • Update area goals

Review Resources:

  • Organize recent additions
  • Archive outdated resources
  • Identify gaps

Process Inbox:

  • File items into appropriate PARA category
  • Create projects if needed
  • Archive or delete irrelevant items

Monthly Review (1st of month)

  • Review all areas for health
  • Identify quarterly goals
  • Plan major projects
  • Archive old completed items

Quarterly Review

  • Big picture planning
  • Area rebalancing
  • Life goal alignment
  • System optimization

Common Questions

Q: Can something be both a Project and a Resource?

A: Yes, at different times. Example: "Productivity" starts as a Resource (you're interested in it). When you decide to "Implement productivity system," it becomes a Project. After implementation, best practices become a Resource again.

Q: How do I handle recurring tasks?

A: If recurring task supports an Area, keep task in Area file and create Project instances when needed:

  • Area: "Health" → "Annual physical" (recurring)
  • Project: "Schedule 2026 physical" (one-time action with deadline)

Q: What about someday/maybe items?

A: Two approaches:

  1. Keep in tasks/someday.md with low priority (🔽)
  2. Archive and retrieve when relevant (PARA encourages active items only)

Q: Should I organize by work vs personal?

A: PARA organizes by actionability, not domain. However, within Projects/Areas/Resources, you can create subfolders:

  • 01-projects/work/ and 01-projects/personal/
  • 02-areas/work/ and 02-areas/personal/

PARA + Obsidian Implementation

Wiki-links: Use [[Project Name]] for connections

Tags: Use #work, #personal, #critical for filtering

Dataview queries: Create dashboard views:

LIST WHERE status = "active"
FROM "01-projects"
SORT deadline ASC

Templates: Use _chiron/templates/ for consistent structure

Tasks plugin: Track tasks within PARA structure

References