The Siren Song of ‘Safe and Stable’: My Big Mistake in April 2022
Listen up. I’m not saying I’m some kind of psychic, but when that “Virgo Career June 2022 Warning” stuff started buzzing around the internet back in April, I scoffed. I really did. I sat there, sipping my awful office coffee, and straight-up dismissed it. I was working a cushy gig, managing the backend for a finance app—Project Chimera. Looked safe. Felt stable. But that’s where the practice, or rather, the prep for the practice, began.
My first action? I pushed back on the gut feeling that something was off. I knew my boss, total Virgo to the core: meticulous, hypercritical, and obsessed with hitting ridiculous deadlines. He had us on a 90-day sprint to launch an impossible feature. The warning was about a “major trouble” born from perfectionism and burnout. I figured, Nah, we’ll brute-force it.
Logging the Little Lies: My Unofficial ‘Disaster Log’ Practice
But the warning got stuck in my head like a bad song. So, my actual practice started subtly. I opened a new plaintext file on a thumb drive I kept hidden in my desk. I named it “June Prep.” I didn’t track code or features; I tracked behavior.

This was the core of my record-keeping:
- I recorded every instance where the lead architect (another Virgo) promised a fix for the database latency but delivered nothing but excuses.
- I noted down the exact dates the CFO walked past our pod without making eye contact—a huge red flag in that office. I cross-checked this with the latest stock dip I read about.
- I documented the sudden, inexplicable shifting of key personnel. One day, Sarah was on Project Chimera; the next, she was quietly moved over to the garbage ‘Maintenance’ team. I wrote it all down.
- Most importantly, I logged the boss’s verbal slips. Every time he referred to Q3 as “a restructuring period” instead of “a growth phase,” I timestamped it.
I dedicated 30 minutes every evening before I shut down my machine to update this log. I ignored the actual technical tasks for a minute and focused only on the corporate tremors. This went on through May. I was actively building evidence against the calm facade the company tried to project.
The June 3rd Betrayal: When Preparation Met Reality
June 2022 rolled in, and everything felt heavy. The pressure cooker was boiling. We were hitting those impossible deadlines, but the code was garbage—a textbook case of Virgo perfectionism causing a deep, systemic failure. You see, the big trouble wasn’t a meteor strike; it was the slow, painful realization that management had sold us a bag of lies to get the product out, knowingly cutting corners on security.
My big breakthrough practice moment happened on June 3rd. We had a mandatory “morale boosting” meeting. I walked in, casually sitting down at the back. The boss stood up, looking too cheerful. He announced a “strategic pivot,” which is corporate speak for “we failed and are selling off the team.” The reason? The massive security audit they had sworn was handled—the one I had logged multiple warnings about—failed spectacularly.
Why did I even bother with this tracking practice in the first place? Well, four years back, I got blindsided at a startup. I lost everything because I trusted the hype and didn’t look beneath the surface. That experience taught me a cruel lesson: trust no one’s promise; trust only documented behavior. After that crash, I vowed to myself I would never again be caught unaware when the corporate ship started sinking.
Executing the Exit: The Payoff of the Practice
The meeting ended in chaos. Everyone was panicking, scrambling to update resumes. But I was calm. I pulled out the thumb drive. I opened up my log. I used my documented warnings—not the astrology stuff, but the real record of mismanagement—to immediately contact my old network. I showed them my clear, chronological record of the Chimera project’s structural decline.
I walked out of that office on June 8th. I didn’t wait for the inevitable layoff email. I used my logged evidence to secure a new gig by the 15th—a better one, too. When my former colleagues finally got their pink slips a week later, I was already settled in and coding hard at the new place.
The warning was real. The trouble was major. But my practice—the daily, deliberate act of observing and logging the truth behind the happy talk—transformed the warning from a disaster into a well-timed career move. That’s the real practice I want to share: document everything, and listen to the whispers, even the weird ones about star signs. It saved my butt. I survived because I prepared.
