Man, so listen, I gotta tell you about how I got into this whole Pisces Moon sign thing. It wasn’t like I just woke up one day and decided to become an astrology guru, nah. It kinda snuck up on me. I was just feeling a bit… watery, you know? Like, super emotional, kinda dreamy, and a lot of the time, just straight-up confused about why I felt what I felt. My buddies would be like, “Dude, what’s with you today?” and I’d just shrug. Didn’t have a clue.
One evening, I was just messing around online, not really looking for anything specific, when I stumbled onto an article talking about moon signs. I’d heard about sun signs, everyone knows their star sign, right? But the moon sign was new to me. I punched in my birth info, and bam, it spit out “Pisces Moon.” I read the description and it was like someone had just peeked into my soul. All that emotional, dreamy, sensitive stuff? Yep, that was me, especially on those days I felt extra weird.
That got me hooked. I thought, “Okay, if this moon thing really affects how I feel, maybe I can get ahead of it. Maybe I can, like, predict my own crazy?” So, I decided right then and there I was gonna try and figure out a monthly outlook for myself, for my Pisces Moon. I wanted to build my own little guide, something I could check in with.
First thing I did was just start jotting stuff down. I grabbed an old notebook, the kind with the cheap paper, and just wrote “Pisces Moon Guide” on the front, all crooked-like. Then, every time I felt a huge wave of emotion, whether it was super happy or super sad or just totally spaced out, I’d make a note. I’d write down the date, what I was feeling, and what was going on around me. Honestly, it was a mess. Just random thoughts and feelings spilling onto the page.

After a couple weeks of this, I had pages and pages of rambling. It was cool to see it all laid out, but it wasn’t a “guide” yet. It was just a diary of my moods. I needed some structure. So, I went back to the internet. I started looking up “Pisces Moon daily,” “Pisces Moon transits,” “what does the moon do in Pisces.” I didn’t know what half of it meant, but I just absorbed it. I’d read a bit, then come back to my notebook and try to connect the dots. Like, “Okay, the article says Pisces Moons might feel extra intuitive when the moon is in Cancer… did I feel that way last week?” Most of the time, I had no idea, but I kept trying.
Putting My Own Guide Together
This was the real hard part. I wanted something actionable. Something I could look at on January 1st and get a rough idea of what the month ahead might hold for my emotional world. So, I tried to break it down. I figured, the moon moves through all the signs every month, right? So, I started tracking that. I’d find an online lunar calendar, write down what sign the moon was in for each day, and then try to anticipate how that would hit my Pisces Moon energy.
- First, I’d pull up a basic moon calendar. Just a simple one, nothing fancy.
- Then, I’d list out the dates and the sign the moon was transiting through. I’d write it out for the whole month.
- Next, I’d try to remember what the general vibe of each moon sign was. Like, “Oh, Leo Moon? Probably gonna feel dramatic or wanna shine.” “Scorpio Moon? Deep, intense, maybe a bit moody.”
- Finally, I’d try to imagine how my Pisces Moon would react to that specific transit. This was pure guesswork at first.
My first attempts were a joke. I’d write stuff like, “Jan 5th: Moon in Virgo. Pisces Moon probably feels super organized today!” Then I’d get to Jan 5th and realize I spent the whole day staring at the ceiling, definitely not organized. But you know what? That was part of the process. I wasn’t getting it wrong; I was just getting data.
I kept refining it. Instead of just guessing, I started looking for more nuanced explanations of how different moon signs interact. I’d read forums, watch random YouTube videos where people talked about it, and just piece together bits of information. I wasn’t trying to be a scholar, just a guy trying to understand his own feelings a bit better.
What really helped was when I started paying attention to the major moon phases too – new moon, full moon, quarters. Those always felt like big emotional shifts for me. So I integrated those into my monthly spread. I’d mark when the full moon was, and write something like, “Full Moon in Leo: Pisces Moon might feel extra expressive, maybe a bit over-the-top with feelings. Watch out for drama.”
After a few months of this, my notebook wasn’t just a mess anymore. It started looking like an actual, albeit very personal, guide. Each month, I’d sit down, sketch out the lunar calendar, and then write my own little notes for each transit and phase. It wasn’t always perfectly accurate, but it gave me a framework. It gave me a heads-up. If I knew a “Scorpio Moon day” was coming, I’d know to expect some deeper feelings and maybe not schedule anything too lighthearted.
It’s still a work in progress, always changing as I learn more about myself and how these energies really play out. But it’s my guide. It’s built from my own experiences, my own feelings, and my own messy notes. And honestly, it’s been a game-changer for just navigating the choppy waters of my Pisces Moon emotional self. It’s not about predicting the future perfectly, it’s about understanding the current a little better.
