SECTION 1: Ditching the Spreadsheet Dream and Hitting the Wall
Man, I spent years trying to be someone I wasn’t. Seriously, most career advice is written for Capricorns or maybe Leos—people who thrive on rigid goals and crushing the competition. I’m a Pisces male. I’m supposed to be swimming, not climbing the damn corporate ladder.
My initial “practical phase” was a disaster. I saw all the lists for high-paying jobs and thought, okay, finance analyst, sales executive, project management—those look solid. I shoved myself into a business development role right out of college. For six months, I had to track metrics, cold call people, and stick to a five-year plan I didn’t care about. I felt physically sick every Sunday night. It was like wearing a scratchy, ill-fitting suit every single day. The money was fine, but my soul was bleeding out.
The core problem? As a classic Pisces, I need meaning. If the task doesn’t connect to something bigger, or if I feel like I’m just pushing paper for profit, I completely shut down. I bounced around like a ping pong ball between three different structured firms over two years. Every time, the result was the same: great initial enthusiasm, followed by extreme mental fog and eventual burnout. I wasn’t failing at the job requirements; I was failing at the emotional requirements of the job. I realized I needed a completely different process to find my “ideal” fit.
SECTION 2: The Emotional Tracking Experiment – Scrap the Tests
Forget those standard online personality tests that tell you to be an accountant or a coder. Those are nonsense for an intuitive type. My next step was simple: pure, brute-force emotional tracking. I started logging everything I did for a month, but I didn’t track hours or productivity. I tracked my instantaneous emotional state. I created two categories:

- Flow States: Moments where I completely lost track of time and felt a deep, quiet satisfaction.
- Dread States: Moments where I felt caged, anxious, or obsessively watching the clock.
I committed to trying twenty different low-stakes activities, from volunteering at an animal shelter to spending an entire afternoon just organizing complicated data sets for a friend’s small business. The data that came back was shocking, but consistent. I was terrible at managing repetitive details (Dread State), but I entered the Flow State when I was either:
- Synthesizing abstract ideas into tangible concepts (writing, teaching complex things simply).
- Deeply connecting with one or two people and helping them solve an emotional or creative barrier.
There was zero Flow State activity in jobs requiring strict hierarchy, cutthroat competition, or isolation from human impact. This completely reversed my initial assumption that I needed a high-structure job for stability. Nope. I needed high emotional reward and low structural rigidity.
SECTION 3: Designing the Perfect Water Tank
Once I realized the structure was the poison, I focused my next phase on environment design. A fish can’t thrive in a desert, even if the desert pays well. I wasn’t looking for a specific job title anymore; I was looking for a functional environment that matched my traits.
I implemented a 90-day trial of freelance consulting for non-profits. This was key. It was low-pressure, high-meaning work. I helped these organizations structure their messaging and internal training documents. The pay was inconsistent, but the feeling was amazing. I found that I excelled when I could use my empathy (a classic Pisces trait) to understand their genuine need, and then my creativity to build a solution they hadn’t seen before.
This phase proved two things: first, that Pisces males need flexibility—being able to choose my working hours and environment massively reduced anxiety. Second, that conflict crushes productivity. Because I was working with non-profits whose goals were aligned with helping others, the internal politics were minimal compared to the profit-driven firms. Less friction meant more flow.
SECTION 4: The Final Realization – Role is Secondary to Impact
So where did this practice lead me? Not to a single ideal job title. Instead, I constructed a career framework. My practice showed that I needed a role that functions as a bridge between abstract concepts and real-world application, allowing me to mentor, share knowledge, and innovate.
I stopped actively applying for typical jobs and instead leaned hard into the knowledge-sharing side of my consulting work. This eventually morphed into what I do now: creating educational content and offering focused mentorship in a niche field (which uses my deep synthesizing ability). It’s technically “content creation” and “coaching,” but that’s just the label. The actual function is using empathy to guide people through complex systems—which ticks every single box identified in the emotional tracking phase.
The lesson I want to share after all this trial and error? Stop trying to be the CEO and start trying to be the guide. For the Pisces male, the best career isn’t defined by the paycheck or the title; it’s defined by how often you manage to slip into that pure Flow State while genuinely helping others. It took years of hating Sundays, but once I accepted my traits instead of fighting them, the career literally found me.
