I swear, if one more person tells me I need to “manifest my intentions” or “align my chakras” to find someone decent, I’m going to lose it. Look, I’m usually not the kind of guy who trusts some random monthly prediction for my love life, especially if it involves fish, but honestly, where I was a month ago? I was desperate. I was done with the apps, done with the ghosting, done with the whole painful process of trying to convince strangers I wasn’t an axe murderer.
I had hit a wall. Dating felt like trying to debug a piece of legacy code written in three different languages—a total mess that just wouldn’t compile. My strategy up till then was simple: act busy, act successful, and minimize emotional exposure. Total failure, obviously. That’s when I saw the headline: Pisces love horoscope this month: Maximize your dating success! I figured, what the hell. If following structured advice for a fish sign works better than my actual personality, I’ll take it.
Deconstructing the Cosmic Blueprint
I printed out that ridiculous horoscope. It was a mushy pile of psychological jargon. But I needed action items, not poetry. I decided to treat this like a sprint project. I pulled out the key themes and translated them into actual, painful behavioral changes I had to implement.
- “Embrace your deepest vulnerability and shed old emotional shields.” I interpreted this as: Stop pretending I hate everything. Stop talking about my stock portfolio and start talking about how I spend three hours a week building model airplanes, which is arguably embarrassing.
- “Seek connections outside your usual social orbit; water signs thrive with earth signs.” I interpreted this as: Stop chasing the same type of high-energy, high-maintenance people. I actually adjusted the filters on the app (which I swore I’d never do) to look for people who listed “staying in” as a primary hobby.
- “Be mindful of where emotional boundaries blur.” This was the tough one. I interpreted this as: If someone is playing games, cut the cord immediately. No second chances, no chasing, no trying to “win” the interaction.
I committed to ten dates under this new, ridiculous astrological mandate. I wasn’t expecting miracles; I was expecting structured failure, which is frankly better than unstructured failure.

The Reason for the Recklessness
Why this sudden obsession with structure and rules derived from a fish sign? Because my last big relationship went down in flames in the most ridiculous, soul-crushing way, and it messed me up completely.
A few years back, I had this serious girlfriend. We were planning the future, talking about rings, the whole nine yards. We were solid, I thought. One Tuesday, she went on a business trip. By Friday, her mom called me, hysterical, asking where her daughter was. I texted, I called, I tracked her credit cards (we shared an account, don’t judge). Silence. She had just vanished. Three weeks later, I got a certified letter. She hadn’t been kidnapped. She hadn’t run away. She had moved to Boise, married her old college boyfriend, and was officially asking for her share of the furniture and telling me not to contact her. No fight, no explanation, just a certified letter. I spent a year just assuming everyone I met was capable of dropping off the face of the earth without a word.
After that whole fiasco, I built walls so high they needed their own zip code. But the walls weren’t working for dating—they just made me look like an emotionless drone. I realized I needed a system, even if it was based on mystical fish advice, just to force myself to lower my guard without the fear of another sudden disappearance.
Implementation: The Messy Middle
The first few dates were painful. I forced myself to follow the vulnerability rule. On Date Three, I started talking about my model airplanes, expecting the usual eye-roll. Instead, the woman laughed and said her dad used to do that, and we spent the next hour talking about tiny glue fumes. That was new.
The boundary rule? It was hard, man. I had to implement the ‘cut the cord’ strategy twice. One woman was habitually 30 minutes late and offered zero apologies. My old self would have just accepted it. My new, Pisces-informed self politely ended the night early, saying my time was valuable. It felt rude, but damn, it was effective at preserving my sanity.
I logged everything in a spreadsheet—not just who I saw, but which “Pisces principle” I employed and the emotional outcome. It looked like the most depressing A/B test ever conceived.
The Outcome: Structure Wins, Stars Take Credit
I hit date number ten last week. I didn’t find “the one,” thank God. That would have been too easy and probably means the universe was pranking me. But here’s what happened: I realized the stars weren’t guiding me; the specific, structured implementation of vague advice was what delivered the change.
I wasn’t magically more attractive; I was just less guarded and more consistent in respecting my own boundaries. By forcing myself to be vulnerable (the model airplanes, the weird childhood stories), I immediately filtered out the shallow people who couldn’t handle real human connection. By strictly enforcing boundaries, I stopped wasting time chasing ghosts.
The whole exercise taught me that the dating apps, just like those complex tech projects, fall apart when there’s no clear, disciplined approach. I still think astrology is mostly nonsense, but I used the framework it provided to run a necessary psychological experiment on myself. And for the first time in ages, my dating spreadsheet doesn’t look like a log of catastrophic failures; it actually shows progress. I even have a second date lined up with an “earth sign” who seems genuinely cool. So maybe the fish knew something after all. Or maybe I just finally learned how to stop coding like a total amateur.
