Starting Off: Why I Needed to Stop Thinking and Start Feeling
Man, I always thought being a Pisces meant I was destined to just daydream my life away, floating around being overly sensitive. People used to tell me I was too emotional, you know? Like I’d walk into a room and instantly feel the vibes, and if the vibes were bad, my whole day was shot. For years, I tried to logic my way out of it. Tried to be grounded, tried to use spreadsheets to solve interpersonal problems. Trust me, that never worked.
The whole point of this practice—the whole reason I kicked this project off—was because I kept failing at fixing the simple stuff. I kept watching people I cared about absolutely tear each other apart over misunderstandings that made zero sense on paper. I’d try to step in, use my ‘common sense,’ and inevitably I’d just get yelled at by both sides. It was exhausting.
I realized I was trying to fight my nature. My nature isn’t spreadsheets and common sense; it’s sensing the currents. It’s seeing the stuff swirling under the surface. So, I figured, maybe I should stop trying to be a Capricorn and just lean into being the overly intuitive, messy water sign I am. I decided to treat my intuition and empathy less like a weakness and more like a high-powered sensor array.
The Practice: Shutting Down the Brain and Opening the Floodgates
I set up a test case. It wasn’t formal, just a real-life situation that had been stressing me out for months: two close friends, Dan and Lisa, were in this perpetual passive-aggressive war over a shared business venture that was clearly failing. They talked about ROI and quarterly reports, but every single meeting felt like a funeral. They were miserable, and I was stuck in the middle.

My first action was to stop offering solutions. Seriously. I vowed I wouldn’t utter a single piece of logical advice for a month. This was the hardest step, because my brain kept shouting, “Just tell them to sell the company already!”
Instead, I dedicated myself to pure absorption. I started scheduling one-on-one sessions with them. Not to mediate, just to listen. I took notes, but the notes weren’t about what they said; they were about what they felt.
- I physically forced myself to look at their eyes, their hands, the subtle twitches.
- I tracked where their voice went high when they claimed they were “totally fine” with the situation.
- I paid attention to the feeling I got in my own gut when they spoke about the other person. If I felt anxiety, I marked that feeling down as theirs, not mine.
With Dan, he kept stressing the numbers, but every time he talked about money, I sensed intense shame. He wasn’t afraid of losing cash; he was afraid of looking like a failure in front of Lisa, who he always admired. With Lisa, she was all sharp criticism, but behind the anger, I picked up this profound feeling of loneliness. She felt Dan had abandoned her in the venture, leaving her to handle the cleanup.
This process of absorbing and separating the feeling from the facts was draining as heck. Seriously, after talking to one of them, I felt like I needed a three-hour nap. But the data I collected was incredible. It was the stuff they couldn’t articulate even if they tried.
The Implementation: Weaponizing Empathy
After weeks of just absorbing this emotional sludge, I brought them together again. I didn’t use a whiteboard. I didn’t mention a single dollar figure. I simply articulated what I had felt from them, using their own hidden language.
I leaned over and started with Dan. “Dan,” I said, “You keep talking about the quarterly loss, but what I’m actually hearing is that you feel like you’ve let Lisa down, and that feeling of letting her down is hurting you more than the money is.”
He just stared at me. His eyes got watery. He hadn’t admitted that to anyone, maybe not even himself.
Then I turned to Lisa. “Lisa, you are so angry about the sloppy paperwork and the missed deadlines, but underneath all that anger, I think you just feel totally alone. You feel like you’re carrying the weight of this thing all by yourself, and that hurts.”
What happened next was totally unexpected. Instead of arguing with me, or even with each other, Dan and Lisa started talking about how they felt, not what they owed. Dan admitted he felt like a total failure and had been avoiding the business out of shame. Lisa burst into tears and said she wasn’t angry at the failure, she was angry that Dan had pulled away from her, making her feel like their friendship was conditional on success.
The argument about the business evaporated instantly. It wasn’t the numbers that mattered; it was the unspoken fear and the profound sense of abandonment that had been festering for months. I didn’t solve their business problem, but I fixed the human problem that was actually causing the failure.
The Takeaway: This Sensitivity Is the Real Power
I realized I had spent years running away from my emotional processing capabilities, calling it weakness, when it was actually the strongest tool in my kit. When you use your Piscean ability to feel things deeply—to connect that intuitively—you skip all the logical steps that people use to mask their real issues. You go straight for the jugular of the heart, and that’s where the healing actually happens.
It’s not just about being nice or being a good listener; it’s about treating those vague, emotional signals as concrete, critical data points. The negative side of being a Pisces—the emotional sponge, the tendency to get overwhelmed—that’s just the cost of running a high-powered sensor array. You gotta manage the drain, sure, but the results? They speak for themselves.
I went from being the guy who couldn’t handle an argument to the guy who could gently, firmly, and accurately identify the source of the hidden pain. Turns out, all that sensitivity wasn’t just useful; it was necessary. Now I just gotta figure out how to take a proper break after every deep dive, because man, that kind of empathy work leaves you absolutely wiped out.
