Look, I gotta be honest with you all. I’m a skeptic. Always have been. My brain just works in spreadsheets and verifiable facts. So when my sister—a serious, capital ‘P’ Pisces who uses the word ‘vibe’ as a verb—sent me the link to this month’s Cosmopolitan monthly horoscope by Aliza Kelly, I laughed. Hard. She didn’t laugh back. She was serious. She said, “You think you’re so smart? Track your month against this specific forecast. Prove it’s crap.”
I rolled my eyes so hard I saw last week. But something stuck. I was entering a tough period at work and felt a bit rudderless. I figured, what the heck? Let’s just see how this spiritual snake oil works in the real world. I committed to the experiment. This wasn’t some casual glance; I was going to drill down and categorize every single prediction into a trackable metric.
The Messy Preparation: Hunting Down the “Truth”
The first step was a nightmare. I had to actually find the specific Aliza Kelly write-up on that Cosmo site. That website, man, I swear it’s designed by people who hate users. Pop-ups, videos auto-playing, banners for things I don’t care about. I spent a good twenty minutes just trying to isolate the text. It felt like I was trying to find a treasure map buried under a mountain of garbage. Finally, I copied the entire thing.
Then, the real work began. I took the full, flowery text—all the mentions of ‘Neptune’s transit’ and ‘fourth house conjunctions’—and broke it down into what I considered eight core, testable “life categories.” I simplified the language down to actionable predictions. No jargon. Just: What is supposed to happen to me this month?

Here’s a taste of what I pulled out:
- Finance: “Expect a sudden influx of cash or a windfall opportunity.”
- Relationships: “A necessary, difficult conversation with a loved one is unavoidable.”
- Career: “You will feel an urge to shift your trajectory or confront stagnation.”
- Health/Energy: “Your physical stamina will be lower than usual; focus on rest.”
- Focus: “You are meant to withdraw and reflect before taking the next big step.”
I taped this simplified list onto the side of my fridge. Every Sunday evening for four weeks, I sat down and reviewed the list against my life. I forced myself to be honest, which was the hardest part of the entire experiment.
The Day-to-Day Grind: Tracking Cosmic Crap
The first week, I was a maniac. I scoured my bank account daily, waiting for the “sudden influx of cash.” Nothing. The cash I got was my regular paycheck, which I promptly spent on bills. My “windfall opportunity” turned out to be an email about a 20% discount on office supplies. Thanks, stars. Prediction 1? Failed.
In the second week, I tried to spark the “difficult conversation.” I even picked a fight with my buddy about who’s turn it was to buy pizza, hoping to fulfill the prophecy. We just laughed it off and ordered the pizza. The most “difficult conversation” I had was with a utility company about an overcharge. That wasn’t a loved one. That was bureaucracy. Prediction 2? Flop.
The ‘Career Shift’ prediction was the most interesting. Did I confront stagnation? No. I just worked my normal forty hours and finished the boring report that was due. The urge to “shift trajectory” was only the urge to shift my chair closer to the coffee machine. The problem with these horoscopes is they are so aggressively vague. If I feel tired (Health/Energy prediction), I can blame the stars, but maybe I just stayed up late watching Netflix. It’s a convenient narrative crutch.
I kept this up for a full 30 days. I logged my interactions, my stress levels, my finances, and my sleep patterns, all with one goal: verify the Cosmopolitan prediction.
The Cold, Hard Truth About Your Month
After a full cycle, I ripped the list off the fridge. What did I conclude? Aliza Kelly’s specific Cosmopolitan Pisces horoscope for this month? It was garbage. Not specifically wrong, but generally useless. It was a massive psychological effect wrapped in pretty language.
Here’s the core truth I realized through all this tracking and logging, and it’s why I’m sharing this whole ridiculous process: The only prediction that really came true was the one that said, “You will feel overwhelmed and spend time reflecting.” Why? Because I was so damn busy forcing my reality to fit a star map written by someone who doesn’t know me, that I created my own stress. I invented my own struggle. It was a self-inflicted cosmic wound.
The truth about your month, any month, is not written in the planets. It’s written by your hands, in your spreadsheets, and in the effort you put in when you’re not looking up what Mercury is doing. My sister, by the way, when I showed her my spreadsheet with all the failed predictions, just smiled. She said, “Well, you did have a breakthrough—a breakthrough in self-awareness.”
Yeah, I guess. I still didn’t get that “sudden influx of cash,” though. So now I have to go figure out how to pay that utility bill.
