Woke up this morning, same time, 6:15 AM, before the alarm even had a chance to squeak. Head’s already buzzing with a thousand things I screwed up yesterday. I usually grab the coffee first, but today I skipped that and immediately fired up the desktop. Straight to the YourTango daily horoscope page. I don’t look at the main page, I use a bookmark—no messing around. I pulled up the Pisces reading. I’m telling you, this whole thing has become my safety check, my morning belt-and-suspenders routine.
I know what you’re thinking. Astrology? Give me a break. A few years ago, I’d have said the same damn thing. But you need to understand why I do this now, why I treat this two-paragraph write-up like a war briefing.
My Stupid Decision and The Shift
It was 2018. I was feeling pretty smart. Had a decent job, a little side hustle, things were clicking. I met this dude, Tony, total smooth talker, had this “sure thing” investment idea that involved some overseas import/export nonsense. Every single alarm bell in my gut was ringing like a fire truck, but I dismissed it. I ignored the caution. I shook off that tight feeling in my chest. I told myself I was being paranoid.
The night before I signed the papers and wired the chunk of cash—money I absolutely could not afford to lose—I remember flipping channels and saw an astrologer on some late-night show talking about how “the energies of this week favor caution over expansion, especially financial trust.” I actually mocked it out loud to my dog, telling him how ridiculous people were.

I wired the money. And just like that, Tony was gone. Poof. He vanished off the map, took my investment, and left me holding a bag of air and debt that took me two years to claw my way out of. It wasn’t just the cash; it was the stupid, arrogant confidence that I knew better.
After that happened, I spent a week on my couch, just staring at the wall. The only thing that got me moving was finding that damn horoscope entry from that night. Not because it was accurate, but because I realized I needed a system—any system—to make me pause and think for five minutes before I pulled the trigger on a life decision. It forced me to slow down. YourTango just happened to be the one I found first when I started this new practice.
Today’s Key Insights Applied
So, back to this morning. Today’s YourTango focus, the key insight they warned me not to miss? It was about Pluto and how it’s shining a harsh light on my need to release a certain person or a toxic situation from my sphere. It specifically talked about the struggle to cut the cord with someone who keeps draining your resources, not necessarily money, but time and emotional energy.
I read the passage three times. Immediately, I knew who they were talking about. My old college roommate, Mike. He doesn’t need money, he just needs validation and a nonstop complaints department, and I’ve been his go-to guy for ten years. Every time he calls, it’s a 45-minute monologue that sucks the life right out of me. I hang up the phone feeling exhausted and ready to pick a fight with my own shadow.
Here’s the process I launched immediately:
- I grabbed my phone: Mike was set to call me at 10 AM to “discuss his latest workplace tragedy.”
- I composed a text: Not a harsh one, but a firm one. I typed it out carefully, then deleted half of it because it sounded too aggressive.
- I simplified the message: I sent him a simple text that said, “Mike, running super hot on deadlines this week, can’t handle calls. Talk next month.”
- I waited for the reply: I watched the three dots appear, then disappear, then reappear. I knew he was crafting a guilt trip or a long explanation.
- I put the phone on silent: I physically moved it across the room and got back to work.
He eventually sent a passive-aggressive ‘Fine’ text. But the point is, I used the YourTango insight—the external trigger—to execute the boundary I should have put up months ago.
I didn’t waste 45 minutes of my morning being a free therapist. My 10 AM hour was productive. I drove my work forward. That’s the key: it’s not about the stars. The stars just gave me the permission slip. I used the warning, I took the action, and I saved my energy. It’s a simple, repeatable process. And after that colossal screw-up in 2018, I’m never going back to just winging it. I track the insights, I implement the blockades, and I log the result. Today’s result? Pure, unspent, clean energy. Done.
