Man, I needed structure. I really did. Up until about five months ago, my life felt like one of those giant piles of laundry you just keep throwing socks at—no system, no sorting, just reacting to whatever happened to fall on my head next. I was burnt out, constantly missing deadlines, and generally feeling like I was swimming upstream, even on the easy days.
I’m a Pisces Sun, Ascendant, and Moon, so I’m naturally prone to just drifting. It’s lovely for creativity, terrible for paying bills on time. I’d tried every productivity hack known to man—bullet journals, time-blocking, the whole deal. They all failed because I lacked a deeper anchor. That’s when I remembered that old box of astrology books my grandma gave me, the ones I’d scoffed at for years.
The Decision to Pull the Charts
I decided in late April that if I was going to fail at planning, I might as well fail spectacularly by leaning into the one thing that actually describes my tendency to drift: the stars. This wasn’t about finding out if I’d meet a tall, dark stranger. This was strictly operational research. I needed to know when the current was going to flow with me, and when it was going to smash me against the rocks.
The first thing I did was grab my old natal chart printout. Then I pulled up the transits for May 2025, specifically looking at how the big, nasty planets—Mars, Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus—were interacting with my personal placements. I wasn’t interested in those fluffy daily horoscopes. I was looking for the hard geometry: squares, oppositions, and conjunctions hitting my angles.

My goal was straightforward: identify five key days in May where I absolutely should not try to start major projects or communications, and five days where the energy was so supportive, I’d be a fool not to launch something important.
- I scanned the whole month first, circling any day Mars squared something sensitive.
- I highlighted the dates the Moon entered a mutable sign (Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius, Pisces), knowing those days make me extra wishy-washy.
- Crucially, I zeroed in on May 23rd, the Full Moon in Sagittarius, which sat right across my chart’s communication axis. That was a high-risk venting day. I marked it in bright red: DO NOT SEND THAT EMAIL.
Implementing the May Plan and My Screw Up
I committed to treating this plan like a project management directive. If the chart said “draft but do not deploy,” I followed it, no matter how inspired I felt.
The very first week of May was surprisingly smooth because I had structured the beginning around a supportive Venus aspect. I locked down three major client contracts that had been dangling since March. It felt effortless, like the paperwork just signed itself.
But then, like the idiot I am, I tested the limits. The whole point of this practice is self-discipline, right? Well, there was this terrible, annoying issue with my internet provider. They kept overcharging me. I had planned to call them on May 15th, a very neutral day. But on May 13th, the chart showed a hard Saturn square hitting my 6th house (daily routines/service). My intuition screamed, “Delay that argument!”
Did I listen? Nope. I snapped. I dialed them up on the 13th, convinced I could muscle through the issue because I had the facts. That conversation was a disaster. The agent was rude, I got heated, and I ended up getting hung up on, achieving absolutely nothing except raising my blood pressure. I wasted two hours of pure aggravation.
I went back to my chart and just stared at that Saturn square. It was sitting right there, laughing at me. I paid the price for ignoring the warning to handle sensitive tasks when timing wasn’t conducive.
The Redemption and the Realization
I learned my lesson fast. The rest of the month, I was militant. I waited until May 25th, when Jupiter finally moved into Gemini and softened things up—a much better moment for negotiations and communication flow. I called the internet company back. This time, I spoke calmly, presented the facts, and within twenty minutes, the entire issue was resolved, and I got a hefty credit.
This whole thing isn’t about fate. It’s about optimizing effort. Why would you try to push a heavy boulder uphill on a day when the ground is slippery and you’re exhausted? That May experiment proved to me that if I identify the days of maximum friction, I can just step away from the boulder and focus on smaller, less volatile tasks.
By the end of May, I had achieved more concrete goals than I had in the previous three months combined. It wasn’t because I worked harder, but because I stopped fighting the tides on those key dates I had highlighted. I followed my own schedule, even when it felt counter-intuitive, and that, oddly enough, brought the grounding and stability I was desperately searching for.
My old colleagues, the ones who always used to laugh when I mentioned anything about cycles or timing, still just react to chaos. They scramble, they burn out, and they blame bad luck. I know better now. I built this plan, I tested it, I messed up the test, and then I fixed my approach. I’m just tracking the weather, but instead of tracking clouds, I’m tracking cosmic flow. And let me tell you, that May 2025 calendar I created is still the model I use every single month now. It just works.
