Man, creating these monthly guides always starts the same way: a massive headache. You see all these astrology reports online, and they are either super vague, full of impossible jargon nobody understands, or just flat-out wrong—written by some AI that couldn’t tell a Neptune trine from a parking ticket. I decided I needed to put together a guide for the July 2024 Pisces horoscope that was actually simple and, crucially, accurate. Not the usual philosophical fluff, but stuff you can actually use.
The Research Phase: A Massive Pile of Noise
The first thing I did was dive headfirst into the data. And when I say dive, I mean swimming through a hot mess. I pulled reports from about ten different sources. You’ve got the traditional astrology folks, the modern psychological astrologers, and then the whole bunch of folks who just copy/paste from last year and change the month. It was an absolute digital dumpster fire.
I found the same problem I always run into with these kinds of synthesis projects. One “expert” claims July is going to be amazing for Pisces’ career, citing Mars moving into Leo, which supposedly gives you drive. Then another one says that exact placement means you’re going to clash with your boss and should hide under your desk until August. It’s like a technical documentation team where everyone is speaking a different language. You try to assemble one cohesive report, and you realize you’ve got forty conflicting pieces of advice.
I spent a solid four hours just sifting through the planetary movement charts for July. Forget the minor aspects—that stuff drives people nuts. I had to identify the really heavy hitters affecting Pisces, which means looking at the angular relationships of Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune, since those are the generational and ruling planets for Pisces. I basically took a red pen and slashed out 80% of the minor planet noise that just confuses people.

Synthesizing the Mess into Simple Points
The entire point of the guide was to make it easy. People don’t want to read a thesis on celestial mechanics. They want to know: “Is July going to suck or not, and what should I do about it?”
So, I categorized everything I kept into the three major buckets people actually care about:
- Career & Money: The practical stuff.
- Love & Relationships: The emotional stuff.
- Health & Wellness: The personal stuff.
This is where the real work started. For instance, focusing on the July placements, I saw a lot of energy moving through the sectors related to daily routines and home life for Pisces. Most reports would talk about the “cosmic flow of domestic tranquility.” I translated that:
Strong Focus: July is the time to fix that broken shelf, organize your files, or finally start that exercise routine you promised yourself. Practical steps, not poetry.
I had to brutalize the language. Every time I saw a word like “syzygy” or “quincunx,” I just chuckled and replaced the entire paragraph with a sentence using common, straightforward verbs like “start,” “finish,” or “talk.”
The Accuracy Check: Making Sure It Sticks
The “Simple” part is easy. The “Accurate” part is the grind. Anyone can simplify; the trick is simplifying without losing the core astrological truth. I didn’t want to just give generic motivational quotes. I had to make sure the advice felt specifically Piscean.
How did I check for accuracy? I used the psychological profile of Pisces—the tendency towards intuition, the need for emotional boundaries, and sometimes, the struggle with procrastination. I ran the simplified July forecasts back through those psychological checkpoints.
If the planetary influence suggested an influx of creative energy (a typical Pisces strength), I didn’t just say “Be creative.” I specified: “Use this mid-month burst of energy to finish that long-delayed side project or creative pursuit, maybe even monetize it.” That makes it actionable and ties directly back to their known strengths and weaknesses.
I found a spot mid-July where the energies were tricky—a potential for emotional overload or confusing communication. Most reports would call it a “shadow period.” I reframed it completely to fit the simple guide:
Warning Sign: Around July 15th-20th, hold off on difficult conversations. If you feel overwhelmed, pull back entirely. Don’t engage in drama, just step away. Wait a few days for the fog to clear before making commitments.
I just kept refining and cross-referencing until every bullet point felt grounded in both the astronomy and the psychology. It took way longer than just compiling a generic report, but that’s the difference between useless filler and something genuinely helpful.
And that’s how this guide got built—by tearing apart a dozen confusing reports, throwing out the jargon, and then rebuilding it with simple verbs and clear, direct advice tailored specifically for someone trying to navigate their July without needing a degree in astrophysics. It’s done. It’s accurate. It’s usable. Mission accomplished.
