Look, I know this sounds totally weird, but yeah, I spent the last week digging up old Yahoo! Monthly Horoscopes for Pisces from 2015. Why? Well, it wasn’t for some deep spiritual quest, trust me. I was just stuck, man. Stuck at home. Three days of this ridiculously heavy snow and ice storm we had last week, and the internet here just died. Completely. Zero signal. I mean, nothing to do but look through physical junk and old digital archives.
I was sorting through a couple of those external hard drives I keep forgetting about, the kind that might have a thousand photos of cables and three actual family pictures. Suddenly, I stumble upon a folder labeled “2015_Backup_Pre-Crash.” Inside? A whole mess of old email drafts, weird calendar entries, and—I kid you not—a stack of printed-out Yahoo! Horoscopes for my sign from that year. I honestly don’t even remember printing these things out, but there they were, fading fast.
You gotta understand, 2015 was a dumpster fire for me, especially romantically. It was a year of wildly complicated almost-relationships, sudden ghostings, and way too much emotional drama. I was younger, dumber, and thought I was getting good at dating. Turns out, I was just a magnet for chaos. So, seeing these predictions now, almost a decade later, sitting here in my quiet, non-snowy-anymore living room, I had to laugh. It looked like the universe was trying to give me cheat codes, and I completely missed the game.
The Great 2015 Date Retrieval Project
The practice wasn’t just comparing the paper to my memory, that would be too easy. My memory is trash. The real work was in digging up the actual dates of the craziness. I literally treated it like a forensic investigation.

First, I had to recover the crime scenes.
- I spent a full afternoon trying to log back into an email account I hadn’t touched since 2017. Why? Because that’s where all the old archived communication threads were filed away.
- Then, I dug up my old digital planner files, the prehistoric software I used back then, just to get the exact dates of certain phone calls and ‘big talks.’ I’m talking about proprietary file formats that barely load anymore.
- I even went scrolling through my old photo library, which is a nightmare of blurry club photos and poorly filtered selfies, just to confirm where I was or who I was with on a few key prediction dates.
The process was grueling, but it gave me a very clear, date-specific timeline. I had the prediction in one column, and the reality in the other.
What I found was hilarious. Take May 2015, for example. The horoscope swore I would experience a “surge in social connection leading to deep emotional fulfillment” and a “chance meeting with someone who expands your intellectual horizons.”
- The Prediction: Deep emotional fulfillment.
- The Reality: I actually met someone that month, yeah. It was a person who was supposedly a philosophy major. We talked for one very long, intense night about existentialism and poetry. It was the deepest conversation I’d had all year. But then, they ghosted me the next morning, only to pop up a week later asking if I could lend them fifty bucks. Fulfillment? Intellectual horizons? More like a financial risk and a massive letdown.
Then there was October 2015. The horoscope warned about “challenging communication and misunderstandings potentially leading to separation.” The stars told me to tread lightly.
- The Reality: Treading lightly? Nope. I decided October was the perfect time to demand clarity from someone who clearly didn’t want to be clear. I provoked a fight, and guess what? We separated. Did the stars cause the separation? No, I did. I was the agent of chaos. The horoscope wasn’t a prediction; it was just a warning based on my terrible relationship pattern that year!
Why This Nonsense Actually Mattered
You might be thinking, “This guy is seriously wasting his time on old star charts.” You’d be right. I was. But here’s the thing. I got so deep into pulling up my 2015 digital life—the texts, the emails, the old dating app profiles—that it stopped being about the horoscope and started being about confronting the past I’d buried.
I realized why I was spending three days doing this ridiculous task while snowed in. My current stable, perfectly normal life had been kind of boring me lately. I was complaining about small things. My brain was clearly trying to find a high-stakes emergency to deal with. And when you don’t have a real emergency, sometimes you create one, even if it’s just logging into a half-dozen dead email accounts and crying over old, failed relationships.
The entire exercise, the digging, the frustration, the eventual grim realization that I was an idiot who ignored obvious signs (from friends, not stars)—it was like a mental detox. It reminded me how complicated and frankly painful things used to be. It wasn’t the stars; it was me just being completely oblivious to my own bad habits.
And you know what the best part was? When the internet finally flickered back on late Sunday night, the first thing I did wasn’t to look up the 2025 horoscope. I just went straight back to my boring, simple, happy life, because I suddenly realized how much effort and drama I used to put into making myself miserable. Never again am I going to let a snowstorm lead me back into my messy 2015 archives. But the record, the practice, is now complete. And let me tell you, Yahoo! was about 50% right, but only because my actions were 100% predictable.
