Man, I usually just scroll past these weekly horoscopes. I’m a Pisces, sure, but the love predictions are always “something passionate is stirring” and the finance is usually “keep your eyes open for unexpected blessings.” Total junk. But last week, things felt tight. Really tight. My car needed a major fix and the insurance renewal hit, so when the subject line promised the full `astrolutely weekly pisces` prediction and specifically shouted about “major money tips,” I bit. I clicked that thing open fast.
The Implementation: Following the Rubbish Advice
I decided, for once, I wouldn’t just read it; I’d follow it. I needed proof, either that this stuff was magic or just garbage, so I could stop looking at it entirely. The finance section had two main actionable items that week. They weren’t cryptic; they were weirdly specific.
- Tip One: Re-establish contact with a figure from your distant professional past who involves infrastructure or metals. An opportunity awaits through a warning.
- Tip Two: Make a small speculative investment into a common, low-profile utility stock before Tuesday’s market close.
I read that first one like three times. Infrastructure or metals? That immediately made me think of my first real job, twenty years ago, working for a wholesale welding supply company. I dug up my old LinkedIn contacts—the ones I never talked to—and located Frank. Frank was the regional manager back then. A decent guy, but we hadn’t exchanged a single word since I quit in ’08. I drafted this super awkward email, trying to sound casual, saying I was just “checking in” and thinking about the “good old days.” I hit send and immediately felt like an idiot. That was the easy part done.
Then came Tip Two. Low-profile utility stock. I logged into my brokerage account, which is mostly just dust and disappointment. I scrolled through the utilities sector. It all looked the same—boring, slow. I picked out one with a ticker I barely recognized, one that services wastewater treatment plants in Nebraska. I pulled out fifty bucks from my small emergency fund, a painful amount given the circumstances, and bought five shares. I felt like I was literally throwing that money into a wishing well. But hey, I was following the prediction to the letter.

The Outcome: Not Money, But a Catastrophe Avoided
Tuesday came and went. The utility stock immediately dropped 5%. I swear these horoscopes are designed by short sellers. So much for the money tips. I figured the whole experiment was a bust, fifty bucks lighter, and ready to unsubscribe.
But then, Frank replied.
He didn’t reply to my “hey, how are things” email. He called my cell phone, which was listed at the bottom of the old email signature. I picked up, expecting him to be pitching me some MLM scheme or something. Instead, he sounded grave.
He said, “Hey, when I saw your name pop up, it reminded me about something critical. Remember the old welding shop, before they sold out? They had a retirement fund program that you opted out of, but you never formally signed the final separation papers for the pension pot they kept running. They sent out letters a year ago warning people, but I bet you moved and never got them.”
I checked my records. Sure enough, I had moved three times since then. I had completely forgotten about a tiny pension pot worth maybe seven grand. Seven grand that was about to be rolled over into an unclaimed funds account with the state, meaning a mountain of paperwork and probably months of fighting to get it back.
Frank, because I reached out to him based on a completely bonkers astrological prediction, saved that money for me. He put me in touch with their old HR person, I signed the forms, and the money landed in my bank account last Thursday. Not as an unexpected windfall, but as a crisis averted.
Why I Had to Try the Ridiculous Prediction
Why did I even bother tracking down a former boss over a vague tip about infrastructure? Because I’m tired of being broke. My wife and I, we had to move back in with her parents last spring. They’re great, but living in a converted attic with a nine-year-old kid is crushing my soul.
I lost my job in tech consulting six months ago when the whole division was dissolved. I sent out hundreds of resumes, got zero meaningful interviews. Every day I sat there staring at the ceiling, feeling useless. I was desperate for a sign, any sign, that taking action would yield a result. Even a bad result would have been better than sitting still.
The horoscope wasn’t a map to riches. The utility stock still sucks, by the way. But the prediction forced me to move, to reconnect, to initiate contact with the ‘distant past.’ That action, born out of pure desperation and a silly star chart, saved my ass from losing seven thousand bucks that we desperately need right now. It didn’t make me money; it stopped me from losing what little I had left. So yeah, I’m still reading the Pisces tips. Not for the finance advice, but for the tasks they assign me.
