I Never Thought I’d Talk About Astrology, But Listen Up
Man, I used to laugh at people who based their life choices on their star sign. I mean, come on, we’re supposed to be practical folks, right? For years, I was that guy—spreadsheet for everything, ROI calculations for buying a new coffee maker. But then life kicks you in the teeth, and suddenly your spreadsheets don’t look so smart anymore.
I started this weird practice—reading my career weekly horoscope, I’m a Pisces, just to see what kind of garbage advice they were peddling. I didn’t believe in it, not one bit. I committed to tracking it for three months just to prove how useless it was. I would read the forecast every Sunday morning, grab my coffee, and snicker at the flowery language about “Mercury in retrograde affecting communication” or “alignments shifting your financial focus.”
But something strange happened after about six weeks of doing this nonsense. I stopped reading it for the prediction, and started reading it for the prompt. I realized that if you strip away all the cosmic mumbo-jumbo, they often hit on three or four basic, highly generalized business themes: Money, Communication, Conflict, or Rest. My system, the simple one I accidentally invented, goes like this:
- First, I trash the stars. I literally ignore the words like “Saturn” or “Neptune.” I just look for the main emotional or operational vibe. Is it telling me to slow down? Is it warning of friction?
- Second, I translate the vibe into a verb. If the vibe is “financial caution,” the verb becomes: Check the books. If the vibe is “potential conflict with superiors,” the verb becomes: Shut up and listen in meetings.
- Third, I assign that verb to my Monday morning plan. It forces me to prioritize one single, non-obvious action before the week even starts.
I wouldn’t have even bothered with this low-effort hack if things hadn’t gone sideways a few years back. The whole reason I developed this ridiculous system was pure, messy desperation.

The Messy Reason I Started Listening to Cosmic Advice
I was working at this mid-sized tech company, running a development team. We were building something big, something they promised was the future. I had invested four years of my life into that project. My wife and I had just bought a house, maxed out our savings, based on the assumption that my stability was locked in. I was planning, structuring, following all the standard rules of career progression.
Then, the axe fell. Not a layoff, exactly. They just decided the whole project was too expensive and the CEO’s nephew had a better idea, so they dissolved my entire division overnight. Gone. Four years of sweat equity vanished. I went from being a VP to being unemployed, with a massive mortgage staring me down. My network, which I thought was solid, suddenly went quiet. Everyone was offering platitudes like, “It’s a tough market,” or “Just dust yourself off.” None of it was useful.
I spent three months spinning my wheels, applying for jobs that were either too junior or too senior, getting nowhere. I was paralyzed. Every conventional piece of advice told me to take the safest option, aim for the big corporation, get the guaranteed salary. But my gut was screaming the opposite, and my standard decision matrices were useless because the inputs were all fear-based.
One morning, I was supposed to be reviewing a resume, but I was so frustrated I just clicked on some random article—it was my weekly Pisces forecast. It was garbage, talking about how “the cosmos demand a restructuring of your home base before leaping into public engagement.” It sounded like the usual junk, but because I was so lost, I translated it brutally: Stop applying for big, high-profile jobs. Focus on cleaning up my immediate financial house and taking temporary, low-key work.
Everyone told me that taking a short-term contract job was stupid, that it looked bad on the resume, that I should aim higher. But the horoscope—my simple, self-created hack—said: Reorganize. Don’t leap. I swallowed my pride and accepted a six-month consulting gig with a tiny former competitor, just managing their database infrastructure. It was boring, it paid less, but it was low pressure and remote.
I swear to God, three months into that contract, the entire industry shifted. The big corporation I was originally going to join announced massive layoffs, shedding half their middle management. Had I followed the “safe” advice, I would have been out on my ear again within months. But because I followed the stupid, simple prompt to “reorganize first,” I was safe, earning money, and out of the line of fire.
The Simple Takeaway
Now, I still check my weekly chart. Not because I think the moon cares about my server maintenance schedule. But because it provides a consistent, outside-the-box framework that forces me to pull back and simplify. When the forecast screams “friction,” I don’t send that aggressive email. When it says “financial boon,” I don’t buy lottery tickets; I double-check the invoices I need to send out. It’s not magic; it’s a quick, high-level sanity check that keeps me from overthinking the obvious stuff when I’m stressed. Try it. Just ignore the stars, grab the verb, and see what happens.
