You know me, I usually focus on stuff you can actually measure—like whether switching out that old light fixture actually cut my electric bill, or if that new gardening technique really produced bigger tomatoes. But lately, I’ve been logging a different kind of practice: trying to figure out if the universe actually gives a damn about my dating life.
I’ll tell you straight up, I’m a Pisces, and for the last six months, my love life has been drier than a handful of sawdust. I was absolutely ready to throw in the towel. I had cleared out all the dating apps, deleted the numbers of anyone who caused drama, and had settled into a comfortable routine of telling myself I was fine just enjoying my own company. It was great, honestly. Peaceful.
Then March 2024 rolled around. My buddy, who is totally into all that crystal and energy stuff, sent me this ridiculous screenshot. It was one of those flashy, clickbait headlines screaming about Pisces and massive romantic shifts. I just laughed it off. But something stuck. Maybe it was the feeling that, okay, I’m officially not looking, so maybe now is when things are supposed to happen? You know how the universe works, right? When you stop looking, it smacks you in the face.
The Practice of Observation and Cross-Referencing
I figured, what the hell. If I’m going to share a record, I need to treat this like a real project. I needed to collect the data.

My first step wasn’t just to read that one article. I opened up three different astrology sites—one very reputable, one generic tabloid style, and one that focuses purely on love matches. I zeroed in on the monthly predictions specifically for Pisces and paid attention to the verbs they used. Were they talking about meeting people, deep emotional connections, or just “feeling creative”?
- Site 1 (Reputable Source): Focused heavily on emotional vulnerability and a “fated encounter” around the second week. Said something about past relationships maybe resurfacing, but in a totally new way.
- Site 2 (Tabloid/Clickbait): Guaranteed massive “soulmate energy” and advised taking risks on spontaneous travel or social events. Very dramatic.
- Site 3 (Love Match Focus): Claimed that Mars shifting into a certain spot meant Pisces would feel incredibly attractive and should use that confidence to initiate conversations, especially with earth signs.
The core message, across all three totally different sources, was a unanimous “Get ready for the love floodgates to open.” My logical brain was telling me this was confirmation bias junk, but my tired-of-being-alone brain said, “Okay, let’s see if this nonsense holds up.”
The Unexpected Real-World Test
I decided I wasn’t going to try to make something happen. The rule of the practice was just to observe the predictions against real life. I didn’t rejoin dating apps. I didn’t actively seek anything out.
But then, two weeks into the month—exactly when Site 1 predicted that fated encounter—stuff went down. And I mean, really went down.
I had lunch scheduled with an old coworker, totally platonic, just catching up. She brought someone with her. It was someone I knew years ago, back in college. We hadn’t spoken in maybe ten years, and when we knew each other, we absolutely did not get along. We were always arguing about projects. We were total oil and water.
When he sat down, I remembered Site 1 talking about “past relationships maybe resurfacing, but in a totally new way.” I mean, he wasn’t a former lover, but he was certainly a figure from the past. And the moment we started talking, the whole dynamic was flipped.
We spent the first hour laughing about how much we used to annoy each other. We talked about how much we’d both changed. There was an immediate, undeniable pull there. It wasn’t the kind of shallow, surface-level attraction you get on an app. It was deep, it was interesting, and it felt incredibly safe and familiar, despite the decade gap.
We ended up ditching the coworker and spent the rest of the day walking around the city. We went straight into talking about the big stuff—our families, our biggest fears, the dumb decisions we made in our twenties. The confidence that Site 3 mentioned? It was there, but it wasn’t manufactured. It was just natural, easy energy.
The Recording of the Result
This happened roughly ten days ago, and let me tell you, we have basically been inseparable since. It feels ridiculous. I’m a mature adult, and I shouldn’t be falling for some random horoscope prediction, but the empirical evidence is right here in front of me.
This wasn’t a slow burn. This was exactly the sudden, intense romantic shift that the horoscopes promised. I went from being totally single and cynical to being absolutely wrapped up in someone who feels like a puzzle piece I didn’t know I was missing.
The key takeaway from this practice, for anyone who asks if I’m going to start relying on daily forecasts now, is simple: I don’t know if the stars caused this, or if I just happened to finally be in a mindset open enough to receive it. But the timing was scary precise. I was ready to quit, and then the prediction dropped, and then the guy showed up. It’s hard to ignore that sequence.
I’m logging this as a successful implementation. Not because I used some complex algorithm, but because I decided to treat the universe’s whispered promise as data. And the data delivered. If your horoscope is telling you to get ready for romance, maybe put down the screwdriver or step away from the spreadsheet, and just pay attention to who walks through the door.
