Add habit tracking to Obsidian without any extra UI—Trider’s JSON export feeds a tiny markdown table at the top of your daily note, showing streaks, freeze days, squad stats and even crisis‑mode micro‑wins, all while staying fully inside your vault.
If you already spend hours in Obsidian, adding a habit layer feels like a natural extension. A habit tracker lives alongside your daily log, your project roadmap, and that half‑finished article you keep revisiting. The key is to keep the system light enough that it never competes with the primary purpose of your vault: thinking and linking ideas.
I tried a few plugins that embed checkboxes directly in markdown. They work, but none of them give me streak visibility or the ability to freeze a day without breaking the chain. That’s where Trider’s mobile app steps in. I keep my habit cards in Trider, then use its Export/Import JSON feature to dump the data into a hidden note each night. The note becomes a snapshot of my streaks, freeze counts, and category colors. When I open Obsidian the next morning, the JSON is already parsed by a tiny community script that renders a tiny table at the top of my daily note. No extra UI, just plain text that Obsidian already loves.
Streaks are motivating, but they can also become a source of pressure. Trider gives me a limited number of freeze days. When a busy week rolls in, I tap “freeze” instead of breaking the chain. The JSON export shows a ❄️ next to the date, so my Obsidian log still records the intent without a zero. Because the freeze count is limited, I’m careful about when I use it – it stays a true safety net, not an excuse.
Obsidian’s strength is linking thoughts. I write a short entry each evening, tag it with #habit, and reference the habit table from the same note. Trider’s Journal feature automatically tags entries with keywords like “fitness” or “focus”. When I run a semantic search in the app, I can pull up all entries that mention “focus” and see the corresponding habit streaks. The result is a narrative of how my habits influence my work, all stored in one vault.
I belong to a small Squad of fellow knowledge workers. The squad chat lives in Trider, but I only sync the squad’s daily completion percentages into a private Obsidian note. That way I can glance at the collective momentum without leaving my vault. If the squad launches a raid—a group challenge to read a book together—I add a “Reading” habit in Trider, link the progress to my Reading tab, and the export script updates the “Books” section of my notes. The whole process feels like a single workflow, not a collection of disjointed apps.
There are days when even the smallest habit feels overwhelming. Trider’s Crisis Mode replaces the full habit list with three micro‑activities: a breathing exercise, a quick vent‑journal entry, and a tiny win like “clear inbox”. I keep a note titled “Crisis Log” that captures the three actions. Because the note lives in Obsidian, I can later reflect on how those micro‑wins helped me get back on track, and the habit export still shows a ✅ for the day—no broken streak, just a different kind of progress.
A tiny bash script runs on my laptop each night: it pulls the latest JSON from Trider, merges it into habit_tracker.md, and commits the change to my Git‑backed vault. The script respects my Premium subscription limits—unlimited AI messages mean I can ask Trider for quick habit tweaks without hitting a cap. If I ever need to tweak the export format, the script is just a few lines of jq and markdown templating. No need to learn a new language; a couple of copy‑paste actions keep the whole system humming.
The habit table sits at the very top of the daily note, a single markdown block that expands as the month grows. I avoid extra headings or decorative lines; the table itself is the visual cue. When I scroll down, the rest of my note remains focused on thoughts, tasks, and research. The habit tracker never intrudes, it simply lives in the margin of my knowledge base.
And that’s how I turned a dedicated habit app into a seamless extension of my Obsidian workflow.
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