Man, sometimes you just get these stupid ideas stuck in your head, right? For months, I’ve been kicking around this theory about market timing and mood swings. I’d been reading all this weird stuff about how the alignment of major signs—specifically the push-pull tension between analytical Gemini energy and emotional Pisces energy—supposedly drives irrational behavior in the broader market.
I figured, what the heck, let’s stop just talking about it and actually track it. I wasn’t just checking my horoscope; I was trying to map high-stress astrological periods onto trading volume and volatility spikes. My plan was simple, if completely unhinged: use these predicted “emotional melt-down” days to execute a big, counter-intuitive financial move. I wanted to see if I could preempt the crowd when they inevitably panicked.
The Setup: Picking the Fight
I earmarked a significant chunk of change—the kind of money you really don’t want to lose—and decided I would deploy it into a highly volatile asset. I targeted a specific leveraged exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracked tech indexes, something designed to amplify swings. I wasn’t going to slowly nibble; I was going for a single, massive, leveraged entry.
I spent three months cataloging the transit dates. Every time the Sun entered Gemini, or Mars moved into Pisces, or whatever other celestial nonsense the charts spat out, I cross-referenced it with the VIX index and major market drawdowns. I charted it all out on a huge whiteboard in my garage, looking like some kind of crazed conspiracy theorist. What I thought I observed was a pattern: the days leading up to a major Gemini/Pisces peak often showed a buildup of weird optimism, followed by a sharp, dramatic drop as the emotional fog cleared.

I zeroed in on two specific weeks in late spring. I prepared the capital, set up my broker terminal, and practiced my entry points repeatedly on paper. I told myself: this isn’t about skill; this is about timing the collective stupidity of the trading floor.
The Execution: When the Stars Didn’t Align
The day arrived. Everything felt tense. I pulled the trigger on a huge short position, betting that the market was about to reverse hard right after the peak emotional influence. My logic was that everyone had bought high on a gut feeling, and the moment reality hit, they’d all run for the hills.
The first twelve hours? Man, I felt like a genius. The price dipped exactly as predicted. I was up nearly 15%. I started calculating how I’d spend the money. But then, everything went completely sideways. Instead of continuing the emotional pullback, the market—for reasons that had absolutely nothing to do with planets and everything to do with some dumb news release I hadn’t accounted for—just kept grinding higher. It wasn’t slow; it was a brutal, relentless climb. I watched my 15% gain turn into a frightening 30% loss within an hour.
I held onto the position for way too long, convincing myself that the stars knew better than the news cycle, a classic amateur mistake. I finally threw in the towel when the margin call warning flashed. I sold the whole mess at a devastating loss, realizing that the only thing emotional about that day was my decision-making process.
The Real Story: Why I Ended Up Staring at Charts
Why would I risk my savings on a planetary alignment? That’s the real lesson here, and it goes back a few years, much like that buddy who lost his job at the tech giant and found peace in embedded systems.
I used to be one of those guys who trusted the spreadsheet. I had a financial advisor, nice suit, expensive office. Everything was conservative, everything was “long-term growth.” Then, back in 2020, I had this major real estate deal. It was supposed to be my big retirement buffer. The advisor told me it was rock solid. I invested everything I had, listened to all the professional advice, signed all the papers.
Three months later, the whole thing imploded spectacularly due to some regulatory change nobody saw coming. I didn’t just lose the expected returns; I lost half the principal.
I called the advisor, but suddenly he was too busy. His emails got shorter. When I finally chased him down, he just shrugged and pointed to the fine print. Said it was “market risk.” I felt completely hung out to dry. All that trust in traditional methods, all those years of careful saving, wiped out by complexity and a guy in a tailored suit who didn’t actually care.
That experience tore up my faith in “expert” knowledge. If the professionals, using all the established tools, could get it that wrong and walk away clean while I took the hit, then why not try something completely ridiculous? Why not the stars? At least the planets aren’t charging me management fees.
So, the practice wasn’t really about Gemini or Pisces. It was about me trying to find an edge in a world I decided was inherently unfair and random. I was desperate for a secret language the establishment didn’t know.
- I executed the big move: Yes.
- Did it work based on astrology: Absolutely not.
- Did I lose money: You bet your butt I did.
The conclusion is boring but true: markets are driven by news, algorithms, and capital flow, not cosmic tension. My big financial move taught me that if you’re trying to recover from a major financial betrayal by leaning into magical thinking, you’re just setting yourself up for the next disappointment. I’m back to charting fundamentals now, but damn, for a few hours, those planets had me convinced I’d broken the code. Never again, though. Never again.
