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Claude Code + Obsidian = UNSTOPPABLE

Chase H makes a compelling case: Claude Code and Obsidian together create something neither can do alone. The tool that makes this possible isn't some expensive AI middleware or complex RAG system—it's a free filing cabinet for your thoughts.

What Makes Obsidian Different

Obsidian is an orchestration layer sitting on top of your markdown files in a folder called a vault. Unlike Notion or other note-taking tools, Obsidian doesn't lock you into vendor platforms. Everything you create is yours—you own it completely.

The real value comes from seeing how notes connect. Click any file and you'll see relationships to related documents. The visual graph on the right shows exactly how projects and ideas relate to each other. With a community of over 2,700 plugins available, Obsidian can be customized endlessly.

But here's where most people get stuck: using Obsidian effectively requires drafting markdown files with specific linking conventions—double brackets around note names, proper formatting, organized folder structures. That's tedious work humans won't do manually. Enter Claude Code.

The Symbiotic Relationship

When you combine Claude Code with Obsidian, something powerful happens. Claude Code acts as a personal assistant that transforms whatever you tell it—whether through prompts, conversations, or rough ideas—into properly formatted markdown files in Obsidian's format. It links everything together automatically.

This isn't just about seeing your notes more clearly. By organizing your files into a coherent hierarchy and connecting them meaningfully, you improve Claude Code's performance directly. The tool becomes better at finding relationships between documents, which compounds over time like daily notes accumulating for years.

The result is what Chase calls "a brain within a brain"—your second brain in Obsidian, with claude.md acting as the frontal cortex making decisions based on everything else you've accumulated.

Setting Up the System

Getting started takes minutes. Download Obsidian from obsidian.md or search Google for the download page. The installer asks where you want your vault—a folder that can live anywhere on your computer, even your desktop. Inside the vault, create subfolders like daily notes, research, and projects.

Once you've created the vault, navigate to a folder inside it in your terminal and start Claude Code. You'll see files appear naturally as you work. To get Claude Code following Obsidian conventions consistently, just tell it directly: "All markdown files need to follow obsidian conventions." Search for Obsidian skills repos online if you want to go further.

The claude.md File as Living Document

The claude.md file traditionally lists project conventions. A recent study called "Evaluating Agents.mmd" found that repository-level context files often hurt more than help because they bring in irrelevant conventions across different parts of a codebase.

However, for personal use cases like note-taking and thinking, claude.md works perfectly. Because your conventions aren't about code—they're about how you want markdown files formatted and how you think—claude.md becomes a living breathing document. Chase demonstrates this after just weeks of using Obsidian with Claude Code: the file continues improving as you add more notes.

The workflow creates what researchers call "a second brain"—Obsidian stores everything, claude.md acts as the decision-making layer that can reference details as needed. The next video in this series shows exactly how to use Claude Code as a research assistant combined with YouTube search and Notebook LM, dumping results directly into your second brain.

Critics Might Note

A counterargument worth considering: while Obsidian provides meaningful organization, some users may prefer full RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation) systems with embeddings and semantic analysis for deeper insights. For most people, that approach is too complex to build and maintain—and the value add doesn't justify the effort. But power users working on sophisticated projects might find the simple filing cabinet metaphor limiting.

Pull Quote

Obsidian is going to be the filing cabinet. It's free both in terms of actual cost and it's not like this is costing us tokens. This is kind of honestly free value—you know, and it's not free value in terms of oh, if you use Obsidian after this video, your life's going to change.

Bottom Line

Chase's strongest argument is the happy medium between chaos and overwhelming complexity—most users don't need a Library of Congress approach but do need more than scattered files. The vulnerability: this remains a demonstration rather than a comprehensive guide, leaving readers wanting more specifics on implementing the full workflow shown in upcoming videos.

If you're using clawed code and its lack of memory makes it feel like you're starting every single session from scratch, then you got to check out this one tool that can fix all your problems. And that tool is Obsidian. It's free. It's simple to use.

And it's going to help us unlock persistent memory for clawed code all while boosting our performance in the process. This allows us to do things that other tools like Open Claw claim to do yet fail completely at, like actually remember things about us and act in a way that a real human personal assistant would. Now, Obsidian is one of those rare tools that really does feel like a value ad across the board. So, I'm really excited for this lesson.

So, let's just hop into it. So, let's first talk about what Obsidian actually is. Obsidian is an orchestration layer, an organization layer on top of your markdown files in a specific folder known as a vault. Obsidian is free.

It is not open source, but everything we create and use with Obsidian is ours, right? We own it. Obsidian does it. There's no vendor lock.

This isn't like Notion. And the real value ad for Obsidian from our point of view is its ability for us to see how our different notes and files and folders connect. So if I have something open right here, you can see how this connects to other related notes and files, right? And you can see over here on the right, we also have these like visual graphs that show us how different documents and projects relate to one another.

Obsidian also has a huge plug-in community. So everything that you'll see today is just on the base level Obsidian, but there are 2736 ways to spice it up if you want to. But why should you care about any of that? How does Obsidian actually relate to you and claude code and your productivity?

Well, to answer that question, you need to understand the symbiotic relationship between these two things and you. So, first and foremost, we have Obsidian and you. What do you get out of this relationship? Well, you get what I just saw, right?

The ability to look at files and click through it and see how they connect and have like visual insight between all of your folders ...