Getting Started: Why I Bothered with Cosmic Stuff
Look, I’m not some airy-fairy guru, okay? I used to laugh at anyone who brought up astrology in a serious conversation. For years, I was grinding away in this middle-management role—finance analysis, total spreadsheet hell. I hated it. Every Monday morning felt like wading through mud. I kept thinking, “Why can’t I just settle down and be good at this like everyone else?”
I must have spent three years trying to force myself into that box. I bought all the career development books. I took the Myers-Briggs (I was an INFP, obviously). I even paid some life coach a ridiculous amount of money, and all she did was tell me to “lean into my strengths.” What strengths? Being good at daydreaming? Useless.
My life felt like a constant battle against the clock and against the concrete reality of quarterly reports. I pushed and pushed, thinking the discomfort was just part of “being professional.” But the burnout was real. I was sleeping maybe four hours a night, waking up in a cold sweat thinking about pivot tables. That kind of stress finally forced me to admit that maybe I wasn’t just lazy; maybe I was fundamentally mismatched to the environment I was trying to thrive in.
The Deep Dive: When Desperation Hit
The turning point wasn’t some grand epiphany; it was a nasty layoff. My department got restructured, and suddenly, I was sitting at home with severance pay and zero direction. That’s when I finally dove deep into my actual birth chart—not just the generic Sun sign, which is useless, but the Ascendant sign. Mine is Pisces, and man, did that explain a lot of my career struggles.
I started reading up on what Pisces Ascendant actually means in terms of how you approach the world and your job. It wasn’t about being flaky; it was about needing work that felt like a service, that allowed for intuition, and most importantly, that had a clear sense of ‘flow’—getting absorbed in the task, almost forgetting you are working. Corporate rigidity? That was the opposite of flow.
The description I read said Pisces Rising people often struggle with boundaries, structure, and intense material focus. They thrive when they are supporting, synthesizing, or creating something soulful. Suddenly, my utter contempt for quarterly targets made perfect sense. I realized I had been trying to force a square peg into a steel circle.
The Practical Trials: Throwing Things Against the Wall
Once I had this realization, I decided I wasn’t going back to corporate spreadsheets. I started testing out industries that supposedly fit this ‘intuitive, service-oriented’ profile. I figured I needed hard proof, not just theories. I compiled a list of potential fits and started networking aggressively to get small contracts or volunteer gigs. This wasn’t cheap or easy; I was living off my savings and the anxiety was definitely there.
- Attempt 1: Tech Consulting (Failure). Everyone says consulting fits Pisces Ascendant because you’re adapting to client needs. Yeah, right. I tried to do UI/UX consulting for a small firm. Too much structure, too many arbitrary deadlines, and the clients were just arguing about budgets. I was back to being a negotiator and a project manager, not a creative synthesizer. I lasted six months before I quit. I felt just as miserable as I did in finance.
- Attempt 2: Healthcare Support (Partial Success). I volunteered for a while doing intake and coordination at a non-profit clinic focused on mental health. This was better. I was using empathy, listening, and connecting people with resources. The work felt incredibly meaningful, fulfilling that service drive. The downside? The pay was abysmal, and the administrative structure was a nightmare of bureaucratic red tape. The stress of caring for people while dealing with broken systems was too much; I started taking on everyone else’s anxiety. I had to step back.
- Attempt 3: Content Creation/Educational Media (The Click). I had always been good at explaining complex things simply. After the clinic burnout, I retreated and started creating short video tutorials and writing explanatory articles on obscure historical and philosophical topics—stuff I genuinely cared about. This wasn’t a direct “service” role, but it activated that intuitive flow state. I was building something from nothing, and it allowed me to escape reality a bit by diving into deep research, which is peak Pisces, honestly.
What I Finally Locked Down (The Industries That Stick)
What did I learn from all this chaotic testing? It wasn’t about the specific industry as much as the environment and the function within it. If you are a Pisces Ascendant, you are probably going to burn out if you are stuck in a hyper-competitive, aggressive sales environment or a heavily metric-driven function where creativity is penalized.
I found that the best fits weren’t necessarily the obvious ones like ‘artist’ or ‘nurse’ (which are too draining for some of us). It was about finding roles that:
- Require Synthesis: Taking disparate information and weaving it into a coherent, beautiful narrative (like content editing, academic research, or strategic communications).
- Allow for Solitude and Focus: Deep, uninterrupted work time is non-negotiable.
- Are Creative and Visual: Anything involving visualization, film, sound design, or abstract design thinking.
- Involve Healing/Support (Indirectly): Not necessarily being the primary healer, but supporting the structures that help people (like the tech side of telemedicine, or content creation for wellness apps).
I ended up doubling down on the Content Creation path, pivoting my historical interests into practical educational blogging and consultancy. It required me to quit two bad jobs and volunteer for six months to figure it out, but hey, now I know: the goal is flow, not just function. Stop trying to beat the drum of corporate stability if your soul is begging for something looser. Trust me on this one; the peace is worth the initial panic of pivoting.
