Man, 2016. What a year. I straight-up remember hitting a wall right at the end of 2015. You know that feeling when you’re just done? My gig back then, pushing insurance policies, was sucking the life outta me. And yeah, I’m a full-on Pisces, which, apparently, means I shouldn’t be talking people into buying things they don’t want.
The whole career thing felt like a maze I couldn’t navigate. I was watching my savings shrink and I was thinking, “I gotta bail on this routine.” So, I figured, why not look to the stars? I’d never really done the whole astrology thing seriously, but I was desperate enough to try anything. I busted out the laptop one rainy Sunday and kicked off the entire process.
The Initial Dive and Sifting the Rubbish
I started with the big, messy search. I typed, I swear, every combo of “Pisces career 2016,” “best job Pisces,” and “astrology salary jump” that I could think of. I used every major search engine, going deep into the forums and the dodgy-looking blog archives. The first thing I noticed was the sheer volume of absolute junk out there. Pages and pages of flowery language that basically said, “You’ll be creative and help people.” Thanks, Captain Obvious, that’s half the jobs on earth.
I spent about three full nights just wading through it, skipping all the stuff written by people who clearly didn’t pay their rent with their horoscope skills. My goal was to find a consensus. I zeroed in on the fields that popped up consistently across the supposedly “reputable” sites—the ones that at least used actual industry terms. They kept hammering home a few specific areas. It was like I was running a basic data analysis on cosmic nonsense.

- Healing and Welfare: Nursing, Counseling, Therapy. Anything one-on-one.
- Creative Arts: Music production, Film editing, Scriptwriting. Roles that demand imagination but allow for solitude.
- Behind-the-Scenes Tech: Anything that needs intuition but isn’t front-facing sales. Think data analysis or system architecture.
The generalized advice was useless. I needed practical steps. So, I took the next, crucial step and mapped those abstract ideas onto real jobs that I actually had a shot at getting with my existing skill set—which was basically zero, outside of making a sales pitch. I knew I had to move beyond the titles and look for the function.
The Practical Test Drive: From Vague Advice to Real-World Action
I drew up a simple spreadsheet to keep track because my head was spinning. Column A was the ‘Astrology Vibe,’ Column B was the ‘Actual Job Title,’ and Column C was a simple ‘Can I Try It Now?’ checklist. It was time to stop reading and start doing. I printed off the sheet and taped it to my fridge as a reminder that I was actually making a move.
The biggest contenders the astrologers were pushing for that year were something related to service and creativity—kind of a blend of the two. That felt like the sweet spot. I locked onto two specific, low-commitment tracks to test out in the evenings after my draining sales job:
- Trial 1: The ‘Direct Service’ Route. I signed up to volunteer at the local animal shelter. I figured, what’s more “service” and “empathetic” than that? I spent a few weekends there, cleaning up messes, coordinating adoptions, and trying to handle the sheer volume of noise. I found out quickly that while my heart was in it, it drained me physically way too fast. Good cause, absolutely the wrong long-term fit for me. I crossed it off the list as a career path, though I still donate.
- Trial 2: The ‘Creative/Tech’ Route. I enrolled in a cheap online course on WordPress and basic Search Engine Optimization (SEO). This was me trying to marry the “behind-the-scenes” tech with the “creative” need. I practiced by building a ridiculously ugly website for my brother’s band and then spent hours trying to optimize it for searches like “best garage band in town.” I found out that I was surprisingly decent at figuring out the logic of the backend stuff—the part that just needs quiet, intuitive thinking. And I actually enjoyed making things work without having to talk to a thousand strangers. This felt promising.
This process of real-world elimination was the key. It only took me about four months into 2016 to realize the horoscopes were only good for pointing the general direction—they didn’t hand you the map. I moved from analysis to creation.
The Realization: My 2016 Top Career Was What I Built
I went back to the community center near the animal shelter, the one I had passed a hundred times. I noticed their website was an absolute disaster—broken forms, outdated info, basically non-existent social media. They were struggling hard for local awareness. I walked straight into the manager’s office and pitched them on managing their entire digital footprint for a small monthly stipend. I told them I could handle their emails, update their public-facing info, and keep their donation portal running smooth. They said yes on the spot because they had zero budget for a real firm.
This wasn’t “Counselor” or “Musician”—the titles the stars threw out. My new, part-time job title? “Digital Outreach Coordinator.” It wasn’t even a full-time thing at first, but I kept plugging away at it, slowly building it up until I could actually quit the insurance gig. It had all the core elements the stars kept mentioning: empathy (community service), creativity (writing posts), and behind-the-scenes tech (website management). I was finally getting paid for something that felt right, where I could use my intuition instead of fighting it.
I checked the horoscopes again recently for a laugh. I dug out my old notes from 2016 and compared my actual path to what was being predicted. The consensus prediction was still “Counseling/Healing Arts.” But the description was always about finding a place where your empathy and intuitive nature could flourish, a job where you weren’t constantly fighting against the flow.
The punchline? The Top Career for Pisces 2016 wasn’t a specific job title they could print in a glossy magazine. It was the job I had to invent for myself—a blended role of tech, communication, and service that used my natural inclination to quietly solve digital problems. If I had just waited for the perfect, pre-labeled “Counselor” job to appear, I’d still be selling insurance today. The stars just gave me the general coordinates, and I had to drive the car to the right spot. That’s the real, practical takeaway I locked down from that whole messy year. Don’t wait for the headline; use the vibe and then go build the gig.
