The Susan Miller Pisces Deep Dive: Hunting for Those Lucky Slots
You see that title, right? Susan Miller Pisces Horoscope: Find Your Luckiest Days Right Now! Man, I needed that “right now” vibe, because lately, things felt like wading through cement. My calendar was jammed up, I felt like I was spinning my wheels on a big project, and frankly, I was starting to believe I was cursed or something.
Look, I’m not a total astrology fanatic, but Susan Miller? Her horoscopes are like reading a novel. They are massive. You can’t just skim them and expect to pull out actionable dates. You gotta treat it like a data extraction project. I decided I wasn’t just going to read it; I was going to conquer it, map it out, and weaponize those lucky days.
Mapping the Jungle: The Acquisition and Initial Data Pull
First thing I did was track down the full, long-form PDF for the current period. I didn’t mess around with the summaries. I needed the full, verbose explanation where she spends three paragraphs detailing why the position of Pluto in the 10th house is a big deal, even if it feels distant.
I started by simply printing the whole thing out. Yeah, old school. I needed physical text to scribble all over. I grabbed three different colored highlighters: yellow for money/career stuff, blue for relationship/family dates, and pink for travel or big creative breakthroughs.

Then I sat down and just started grinding. It took three hours, maybe more. I was reading every single sentence, trying to pull out the specifics. It wasn’t just “good month for money.” It was “On July 12th, Mars enters your 2nd House, making it perfect for signing large contracts or asking for a raise.” That’s the specific detail I was hunting for.
- I physically marked every date mentioned.
- I wrote down the specific planetary aspect next to the date (e.g., “Jupiter trine Sun”).
- I noted the specific house it fell into (this is crucial for personalization).
The Spreadsheets and the Personal Chart Overlay
Once I had a pile of highlighted, messy pages, I moved everything into a simple Excel sheet. I wasn’t using fancy software, just columns: Date, Aspect, House, Category (Yellow/Blue/Pink), and a column for my own notes.
This is where most people quit, I think. They read the general reading, feel good for a minute, and forget it. But I wasn’t doing this for a quick confidence boost. I was doing this because I was desperate to schedule a major life shift correctly. I had to cross-reference Susan’s predictions with my own natal chart.
I pulled up my personal chart details (I know my rising sign and where my Moon sits, thankfully). I then compared every single “lucky” date listed by Susan Miller against the transits hitting my personal houses. For example, if she said a New Moon was amazing for Pisces career goals, but that New Moon was happening in my 6th house of routine and health, I downgraded it slightly. It became a day for implementing healthier routines, not for pitching a massive new business idea.
I manually adjusted the ‘Luck Score’ on the spreadsheet based on this cross-referencing. Dates that aligned perfectly—a powerful Jupiter aspect hitting the exact house where my natal Moon sits—those got labeled “GO TIME.”
Why I Needed to Treat a Horoscope Like a Project Plan
You might be thinking, “Jeez, that’s intense for a horoscope.” Yeah, it is. But I needed intensity because the last few months had been a financial and professional mess. Remember that big client deal I was working on? The one I spent six months trying to close? They yanked the rug out right when I thought we were signing.
It wasn’t just the money, though that stung bad. It was the timing. It happened right after I had committed to a huge down payment on a place, believing that income stream was locked in. Suddenly, I was looking at mortgage payments and zero margin for error.
I had to pivot hard and launch a new service offering—something completely different that required a flawless debut. I couldn’t afford another major failure. So I thought, okay, if I’m launching this huge, make-or-break venture, I am not going to trust my own gut. I’m going to trust the planets, but only after I’ve verified the data myself. This wasn’t about being woo-woo; it was about risk mitigation through ancient pattern recognition, treated with modern project management rigor.
The Realization and Implementation
After all the filtering, the messy papers, and the detailed spreadsheet work, three specific dates emerged as the absolute best for my personal goals: one for the launch, one for the big client pitch, and one for signing the new contracts. They were far apart, giving me crucial time to prepare.
I circled them in red on my physical wall calendar. I locked them in on my digital calendar and set alarms titled “PLANETARY CONJUNCTION: DO NOT FAIL.”
What happened next? I worked my butt off to make sure the product was ready by the first “GO TIME” date. I scheduled the scary, high-stakes pitch for the second date. Everything I could control, I controlled. But the dates themselves? They gave me an insane burst of confidence. It wasn’t just hope; it was a strategically planned hope.
The product launch on the first lucky day? Smooth. No massive technical glitches, which is a miracle for me. The big pitch on the second day? They loved it. They signed on the spot. I credit the hard work, obviously, but knowing I had chosen the absolute perfect window, derived from hours of data extraction and cross-referencing, absolutely changed my mental game. Sometimes you just need to structure the chaos to find the luck hiding inside it.
