Practically every time I write a post on Meta which mentions a question from Main, it is relevant for people reading the question on Main to know about the Meta post. Sometimes it is useful information which clarifies policy, sometimes it is even more closely coupled. For example, I made a Meta question today which was a specific discussion about whether a given question from Main is on topic. I had to take special care to link to the Meta question so people will know there is discussion about it, but it is possibly being lost in the list of comments.
I propose a feature: when somebody writes a Meta question and includes an existing question from Main in its body (or title, I suppose - don't know if this is possible) the question from Main should get either a comment or a post notice saying something on the lines of "this question is part of a Meta discussion", with a link to the discussion.
This will reduce the users' effort of setting these links manually, eliminate the risk of them forgetting to set them at all, and, if the notice variant is chosen, people will realize that there is a discussion they can take into account before writing comments or voting to close.
I am sure that this idea can use some thought in fleshing out. For example, it would be probably not so useful if applied to feature-request or bug questions, so it could be automatically restricted to link discussion questions. (Idea suggested by rene in comments).