Getting Out of the Dream Cycle: Why I Stopped Sabotaging My Own Career
Man, if I have to hear one more astrologer talk about the “visionary potential” of the Aquarius Sun paired with the Pisces Moon, I might scream. Look, I get it. We’re supposed to be big thinkers, empathetic, boundary-breaking innovators. But in the real world, especially when you’re trying to hold down a job and pay rent, that combo is a total mess if you don’t manage it. It took me years, and honestly, a near-breakdown, to finally figure out why I kept quitting jobs that seemed perfect on paper.
I realized I wasn’t just job-hopping; I was dream-hopping. I’d fall head-over-heels for the abstract idea—the startup’s mission, the revolutionary tech, the chance to “change the game” (classic Aquarius idealism). But the second the reality hit—the messy bureaucracy, the passive-aggressive colleagues, the nine-to-five grind—my Pisces Moon side would get completely drained, and I’d check out. I’d straight-up quit. My resume looked like a timeline of fantastic ideas that lasted 18 months max.
The real turning point wasn’t a huge spiritual awakening; it was when I walked away from a decent engineering manager role—stable salary, great benefits—to join a “community-focused decentralized platform” startup. It sounded incredible. I interviewed with the founder; we talked for hours about systemic change. I was hooked on the vision. Two months later, the founder was missing deadlines, the team was communicating solely through cryptic Slack messages, and nobody could define a basic deliverable. I sank into a spiral of anxiety because I couldn’t handle the lack of structure and the constant emotional ambiguity. I quit, broke, and realized I needed an intervention against my own airy, watery brain.
I Forced Myself to Get Concrete: Vetting the Present, Not Just the Future
My first step? I stopped interviewing for ideas and started interviewing for process. This was brutal because it meant asking awkward, non-visionary questions that felt dirty to my idealistic core. But I committed. Here’s what I started doing every single time a potential employer tried to sell me on a big, beautiful future:
- I demanded structure: Instead of asking, “What’s the overall mission?” I started asking, “Show me the Jira board. What did the last sprint look like? Who approved the last two major features, and what was the pushback?” I needed to ground myself in the actual work being done.
- I dug into the people: My Pisces Moon tendency is to assume everyone is kind and means well. My Aquarius Sun tendency is to ignore the people and focus on the concept. I fought this impulse hard. I insisted on informational chats with mid-level employees, not just the CEO. I asked them, “When was the last time this company messed up a product release, and how was accountability handled?” If they just smiled and said “We learned a lot,” I walked. I needed proof they could handle conflict, not just avoid it.
- I imposed boundaries before signing: This was the toughest part. I usually melt into whatever the environment needs. This time, I declared my non-negotiables upfront. I flat out asked, “What is the expectation for answering emails after 6 PM? How many hours of documented overtime did this specific team put in last month?” When they gave me vague answers about “flexibility,” I pushed back and said, “I need clarity on sustainable hours; otherwise, I cannot perform at the level you need.”
I realized I needed a container—a durable, slightly boring container—to hold all my crazy, visionary energy. If the container is leaky, messy, or emotionally volatile, I’ll dissolve into anxiety and leave.
The Result: Embracing the “Boring” Foundation
I finally secured my current role at a logistics firm. Logistics! Not exactly decentralized autonomous organizations or saving the planet with AI. But guess what? They use rigid processes. They track everything. They have predictable cycles. It’s structured to the point of being tedious, and that’s precisely why it works for me.
I no longer drain myself fighting against chaotic processes or trying to fix emotionally stunted founders. I put my head down, executed my role reliably, and suddenly, my Aquarius ideas had a stable platform to launch from. Because I wasn’t spending 80% of my energy coping with ambiguity, I finally had the mental space to innovate within the system. Now, I use the stability of this job to fuel my truly wild, innovative side projects on the weekends. I stopped confusing my day job with my spiritual mission.
If you have that airy-watery combo, listen to me: you need structure more than you need vision right now. Go for the stable platform. You can still save the world, but first, you have to save yourself from constantly quitting the next great idea.
