I remember it like it was yesterday, though it was a good while back, maybe a few years after 2017 itself. I was just chilling one evening, scrolling through stuff, and somehow, my mind just drifted back to that year, 2017. For some reason, I just started wondering about Pisces, my star sign, and what those old monthly predictions in Urdu might have said back then. Not for any serious reason, you know, just a random thought that stuck.
So, I figured, why not try to find some of that old data? It sounded like a bit of a treasure hunt. I started off with some pretty basic searches online, just typing in stuff like “Pisces monthly horoscope Urdu 2017” and “Meen burj mahana rashifal 2017 free”. Man, let me tell you, it wasn’t a walk in the park. A lot of what popped up was current stuff, or just general astrology articles. Finding specific, archived monthly predictions for a particular year, and in Urdu, that was a whole different ballgame. I clicked through so many links, some of them looked promising but led to nothing. Some sites wanted me to sign up, others looked super shady. I was really digging around, trying different search terms, going deeper and deeper into the search results than I usually bother to.
After what felt like ages, I finally stumbled upon a few forums and some archived blog posts. These weren’t exactly official astrology sites, more like community discussions where people had shared snippets or even full scans of old monthly predictions. The trick was finding the ones specifically for 2017 and for Pisces. I hit a few dead ends, old links that didn’t work anymore, or content that had been removed. But then, there it was. A thread on an old forum, someone had actually uploaded images of an Urdu monthly astrology magazine’s predictions for Pisces for each month of 2017. And the best part? It was all free. No sign-ups, no paywalls, just sitting there, plain as day. It felt like finding a forgotten dusty old book in an attic, you know?
I downloaded those images, a bunch of them, one for each month. Now, reading Urdu, especially the script from an older magazine, took a bit of effort for me. It wasn’t like reading a modern website. But I grabbed my cup of tea, settled in, and just started going through them, month by month. I started with January 2017. I read through what it said about health, finances, relationships, travel for Pisces for that month. Then I moved to February, then March, all the way to December. It was a really slow process, taking my time to decipher some of the words and phrases. I wasn’t just skimming; I was trying to understand the nuances of what was being predicted.

As I read each month’s prediction, I instinctively started to think back to what actually happened in my life during those times in 2017. It was a weird mental exercise. Some of the predictions, I remember thinking, “Huh, that kind of makes sense, maybe something like that did happen.” Other times, I’d just chuckle, because it was completely off the mark for me personally. Like, one month it would predict some big financial gain, and I’d be like, “Nope, definitely didn’t win the lottery that month!” Or it would talk about exciting travel, and I was just stuck at home, working.
What was really interesting was how vague some of the predictions were, which I guess makes sense, right? They’re meant to apply to a huge group of people. But even with the vagueness, my brain was trying to connect dots, looking for any shred of correlation with my own life events. It made me reflect on that year in a way I hadn’t done before. It wasn’t about whether astrology was “true” or not; it was more about the act of looking back, revisiting my own past through the lens of these old predictions. It was like taking a mental trip down memory lane, prompted by some old text.
By the time I finished going through all twelve months, I felt like I had gone on a bit of a journey. It wasn’t about finding definitive answers or proving anything. It was just a cool, free way to spend an evening, to satisfy a random curiosity, and to re-engage with a year that had long since passed. It was a fun little project, and getting all that old prediction data for free just made the whole experience even better. It showed me that if you dig deep enough, sometimes you can find exactly what you’re looking for, even if it’s just a bunch of old horoscopes.
