Man, I gotta be honest with you guys. Looking at a horoscope, especially a June one from way back when, seems like a pretty dumb thing for a guy like me to be putting effort into, right? I agree. It felt ridiculous when I started, but hear me out. This whole “practice” of tracking my Pisces future actually saved my butt when my life completely spun out of control.
The Day My Crystal Ball Shattered
A few years ago, I was feeling good. No, I was feeling great. I was deep into this ‘digital asset’ thing. I spent six months straight, seriously, every waking hour, crunching numbers, reading white papers, building these crazy spreadsheet models, trying to predict the next big upswing. I believed I had it cracked. I was going to secure my family’s future, retire early, all that jazz. I went all in. My logic was flawless, my data was perfect, and the charts were screaming “send it!”
Then, the whole market just instantly evaporated. It didn’t dip; it didn’t correct; it simply tanked and stayed tanked. I logged into my account one morning, saw the numbers, and the breath just left my body. Everything I had built, everything I had planned, poof, gone. We’re talking rent money, savings, the whole nine yards. I couldn’t wrap my head around it. How could perfect logic fail? I was completely adrift. I just sat there for days, feeling the walls close in.
My wife was pregnant at the time, and I had promised her stability. Now, I was a walking disaster zone, staring at a screen that just said “zero.” I freaked out. I needed a sign, any sign, that my life wasn’t randomly determined by some chaos factor. Logic had failed me. Data had lied. So, in a moment of utter desperation and probably needing a laugh, I searched up my daily horoscope. Yeah, I went there.

The Pisces June Project: Starting the Log
I needed a new system. If logic was useless, maybe absurdity worked. I decided to start an absurd project: I was going to meticulously log every single prediction made for my sign, starting with that current June forecast, and check it against the reality of my absolutely dreadful days. This wasn’t about believing the stars; it was about finding an external pattern to cling to when my internal world was collapsing. I figured, if this mystical garbage had a better hit rate than my sophisticated algorithms, I had learned something important: the universe is a joke, and I need a different job.
I grabbed an old notebook—I still use it today—and started the first entry. The title was the one you see today. I scanned every major astrology site I could find (no, I’m not linking them, they’re everywhere) and condensed the predictions for Pisces in June into key categories. Then, I tracked my days religiously.
My tracking process for the June prediction went like this:
- Step 1: Extracted the Core Claims. I focused on the vague stuff: “Financial opportunities abound,” “A significant relationship shift is coming,” and “You must step into your power this month.” I wrote these down big and bold.
- Step 2: Established ‘Metrics’. For “opportunities,” I logged every job application I submitted and every interview I landed. For “relationships,” I recorded every fight and every successful conversation with my wife (which, initially, were mostly fights). For “stepping into power,” I noted down every moment I pushed myself to do something productive, like forcing myself to write a new resume instead of staring at the ceiling.
- Step 3: Daily Scorecard. Every single night, no matter how exhausted, I assigned a simple 1-5 score to the day based on the prediction. Did I feel “opportunity” today? 1 = No, 5 = Big time. It was messy, it was biased, but I stayed committed to the ritual.
I stuck with this ridiculous tracking process for weeks. I kept filling those pages. It was boring, meticulous work, the opposite of the high-stakes trading I used to do. That was the point. The commitment to the mundane task became my new structure.
The Real Future: The Achievement
What did I find? The June horoscope, and all the subsequent ones, were utter, predictable garbage. The hit rate was random noise. When they said “financial stability is within reach,” I was eating beans and rice. When they said “a creative partnership will flourish,” I was getting rejection emails.
But here’s the unexpected kicker, the real achievement: Sticking to that log, that stupid, tedious log, forced me to be honest about my actual daily actions. It forced me to record what I did, not just what I felt. The horoscope said, “opportunities abound,” so I made opportunities by applying for ten jobs, just so I could log something. It tricked me into being productive by turning my recovery into a data-logging exercise.
The practice itself became the future I needed. I eventually landed a boring, stable job—a fixed, nine-to-five gig in corporate IT maintenance, totally different from my high-flying finance dreams. It’s dull, it’s secure, and it pays the bills. It’s the opposite of “stepping into your power,” but I can sleep at night, and I can look my son and wife in the eye. That stability is the true ‘future’ I achieved.
The hilarious thing? A few months after I started the stable job and finally got my head straight, the guys from my old investment circle suddenly started calling. They were selling the new big thing, saying I should jump back in. “Your time is now,” they’d say, sounding exactly like the horoscope. I just laughed and blocked every single one of them. They’re still chasing that fictional “future.” I closed my June notebook and realized the stars didn’t lead me to success; the act of consistently writing things down did.
