I’m gonna be honest with you—I always thought the whole zodiac thing was total crap. Just weak-minded spiritual fluff for people who can’t take responsibility. I’m a numbers person. Always have been. But then I met Alex.
This whole investigation, this whole deep dive into what makes a Pisces tick, wasn’t some fun weekend project. It was a matter of self-preservation. I literally had to figure out what was wrong with this guy, or I was going to lose my mind. I was ready to quit my job, pack my bags, and move to another country just to get away from the sheer, unadulterated chaos he brought into the office.
Alex was the new team lead. A nice guy, seemingly. Always smiling, always using deep, emotional language about “team synergy” and “following our cosmic path.” Sounds great on paper, right? But the minute you needed a firm decision, the minute there was a conflict, or the minute the server crashed? He was gone. Poof. Vanished like a puff of smoke. Not figuratively. I mean literally. He’d just stop answering emails, his phone would go dead, and his desk would be empty. He’d show up two days later, eyes puffy, talking about how he “needed to meditate by the ocean” because the office “energy was too toxic.”
The Trigger: When My Life Got Tangled in His Fog
I tried to be rational. I approached him with spreadsheets. I showed him the numbers. I demonstrated the direct consequences of his non-decisions. I presented solutions A, B, and C. He just looked at me with those huge, wet eyes and said, “Oh, honey, don’t you worry your little head. The universe will provide.”

The universe did not provide. The universe actually decided to serve us a massive client complaint followed by a $50,000 penalty. This fine happened because Alex, bless his heart, could not say no to the client’s impossible last-minute changes, even though I had begged him to stick to the contract. He’d agreed with me fiercely in the meeting, then turned around and e-mailed the client “sure, anything for you!” minutes later.
That night, I was home, pacing, feeling sick to my stomach, because the CEO had just reassigned the project—and me—to another team. I felt like I was losing my career over this wishy-washy idiot. I poured myself a strong drink and sat down at my computer, not to look for a new job, but to finally figure out what kind of psychological disorder this was. I typed into Google: “Why does my manager cry easily and hate making decisions?”
That’s how I landed on a random site about zodiac signs. I found his birth date—March 1st. Checked the box. Pisces. I scoffed. But I started reading. And damn, if it didn’t feel like I was reading a technical manual for Alex’s exact set of software bugs.
My 5-Point Practical Checklist (The Real Research)
I didn’t stop there. I decided to treat this like a real-world test. I went back through every messy interaction with Alex over the last six months and used the top five “Pisces traits” I read about as a checklist. I needed to know for sure if this was legit or just confirmation bias. My practice became:
- The Escapist Tendency: I tracked every time the pressure rose and he pulled a Houdini. It wasn’t random; it was like a self-defense mechanism. If the heat got turned up even slightly, he meltdowned and vanished. It happened 9 times in 6 months. Clear Sign 1: Confirmed.
- Emotional Sponge/Martyr Complex: I recorded his use of phrases like “I sacrificed so much” or “I feel the pain of the whole team.” He would soak up everyone’s problems, but then use it as an excuse for why he was too exhausted to do his actual job. It wasn’t empathy; it was a performance. Clear Sign 2: Confirmed.
- The Vague Promises: I reviewed my meeting notes. His promises were never concrete. Always “I’ll think about it,” or “We’ll see what the stars align for.” He could not commit. I literally started asking him “Yes or No, Alex,” and he’d reply, “Maybe a little bit of both?” Clear Sign 3: Confirmed.
- The Over-Imagination: We had a major pitch deck to make. Alex spent 48 hours designing a custom font and a watercolor graphic for the title slide while the content was still blank. He lived in a fantasy world where the aesthetic made up for the missing substance. Clear Sign 4: Confirmed.
- The Lack of Boundary: I observed him taking on side projects for everyone who asked, regardless of his existing workload, leading to him failing on all of them. He couldn’t define where he ended and another person started. He was a yes-man to his own detriment. Clear Sign 5: Confirmed.
The Realization: Not About Stars, But Expectation Management
I realized the universe wasn’t trying to punish me. I didn’t suddenly start believing in the celestial nonsense. What I figured out was that this wasn’t bad behavior; it was a personality operating system. The code was messy, but it was predictable.
The practice wasn’t about verifying astrology; it was about getting a playbook. I stopped expecting logic and started treating him like the sensitive, flighty, well-meaning fish he was. I learned to give him two deadlines: the fake one, and the real one. I started asking simple, closed-ended questions and insisted on an answer right now before he could float away. I removed him from decision-making entirely, saying, “Alex, your creative vision is needed on the logo, I’ll handle the boring approvals.”
It saved my sanity. The new team I moved to is great. Alex is still floating around, probably still crying over a sad commercial and wondering why everyone is so mean. But I learned my lesson: sometimes, the stupidest-sounding manual gives you the clearest instructions on how to handle the weirdos in your life. It saved my career, and that’s the only practical result that matters to me. Forget the stars; I found the pattern, and I used it.
