The Dive Into the Confusion: My Practical Log
I started digging into this whole Pisces thing because I couldn’t figure out one specific person, my old college roommate, Liam. That guy was a walking contradiction. One day he was laser-focused, outlining a complicated five-year financial plan, and the next day he’d quit his job to “find himself” backpacking across some ridiculously remote part of South America. He’d struggle to even pay rent, but he’d spend his last dime on a canvas and expensive paints just because he felt the urge to create. I watched him live this way for years, and frankly, it drove me nuts trying to predict his next move. I decided I had to figure out the operational logic behind this madness.
I didn’t pick up some dusty old book. I went practical. I began by tracking the decisions of three key Pisces people I knew well. Liam, my boss at a failed startup (he was the visionary), and a friend who is an artist. I created a behavioral matrix—a simple spreadsheet. Column A was “The Realistic Goal Achieved,” Column B was “The Imaginative Escape.” For two months, I logged every instance where they expressed a strong intention followed by an equally strong desire to abandon it for something completely unreal or unstructured.
The patterns quickly emerged. It wasn’t that they couldn’t handle reality; it’s that they found reality insufficient, restrictive, and often downright painful. The structure of doing the dishes or filing taxes immediately triggered a flight response into the fantasy world they were constantly building in their heads. They thrive on limitless possibilities, but real life, man, real life always has limits.
I isolated the core conflict: The need for emotional connection and creative expression vs. the complete porousness of their emotional boundaries. They are so sensitive they soak up everyone else’s feelings, which is exhausting. To deal with the overwhelming input of the real world, they bolt. They don’t walk away; they mentally vaporize.

I tracked Liam’s job cycle. He would start a job, immerse himself in the potential vision of the company, and then when the actual work demanded monotonous repetition or bureaucratic nonsense, he would immediately feel spiritually suffocated. He didn’t quit because he was bored; he quit because the practical elements of the job crushed his dream of what the job could be. It was always a fantasy job that he lost, not the real one.
The Messy Findings and What I Learned
The practice showed me that Pisces people don’t just dream; they live in the dream. The boundary isn’t just blurry; it’s often nonexistent. They struggle to differentiate their strong empathy from actual responsibility. They feel things so deeply that they try to escape the feeling by dissolving into art, spirituality, or unfortunately, sometimes addiction. This inability to anchor themselves is exactly why they confuse everyone around them.
Here’s the breakdown I figured out after all that tracking:
- The Dissolution Factor: They seek oneness, blending, or fusion. This is great for creative flow but terrible for signing a binding legal contract or committing to a fixed schedule. They resist definition because definition means limits.
- The Martyr/Savior Complex: They constantly want to help and carry the burdens of others. But once the burden is heavy, they realize they can’t save everyone, and that failure sends them straight back into isolation and confusion.
- The Artistic Trap: Their creativity is massive, but the need for structure to actually produce finished work often kills the initial inspiring spark. They’d rather keep the idea perfect in their head than risk imperfections by executing it in messy reality.
This whole practice kicked off because I had a massive financial hit a couple of years ago, and I needed answers on why certain people in my life always sabotaged themselves and those around them. My own startup crashed not because the idea was bad, but because my main investor—a textbook Pisces—pulled out at the absolute last minute. He saw the reality of the required workload and fantasized that the money would just magically flow without him having to do the boring stuff like sit through board meetings or answer emails. I watched him literally disappear for a week leading up to the final funding round. I tracked him down only to be told he felt “the universe was calling him to meditate in isolation” instead of signing documents.
I spent months cleaning up the legal wreckage from that impulsive bail-out. I vowed then that I would understand the underlying mechanics of these personality types so I could protect myself. That whole mess forced me to re-evaluate every partnership. Now I use my observations, my logs, and my experience to navigate who I can rely on and who is likely to swim off into the mystic fog when things get tough. Understanding their confusion helped me realize it was never about me; it was always about their internal war between the beautiful escape and the ugly truth of paying bills. It was a hell of a stressful way to get my practical astrological education, but I wouldn’t trade the hard-won knowledge.
