You see a title like that, “May 2020 Virgo Monthly Horoscope: Love and Money Forecast,” and you probably figure some super zen dude with a crystal ball and a nice office wrote it, right? Nah. Forget that whole scene. That piece? That was me, sitting in a tiny, rented room with a cracked screen, sweating over a deadline, trying to make some sense out of thin air just to get paid. It wasn’t a forecast, it was a content mill operation. A terrible, soul-crushing one.
The journey to writing that absolute nonsense started with a layoff. My engineering job, the one I had for ten years, just evaporated. Poof. One Monday morning, they walked us out with two weeks severance and a shrug. That was late 2019. The panic was real. I had bills piling up, and the job market was tighter than a drum. I was hitting the job boards every day, submitting applications, and getting absolutely nothing back. Just silence.
Then a buddy, someone I used to get coffee with, sends me this weird link. It was for a company that “specialized in aggregated spiritual content.” Sounded fancy. It was code for: “We need people to churn out hundreds of personalized-sounding articles a month using vague words and zero research.” I interviewed with a guy who clearly hadn’t slept in three days. He just wanted bodies who could type. He didn’t ask about astrology, he asked about my typing speed and how many articles I could write in an eight-hour shift. I told him I could do thirty. I was lying through my teeth, but I needed that paycheck, man.

The Grinding Operation I Set Up
The first few weeks were chaos. I had to build a system, because trying to sound authentic for twelve signs across four major topics every month was impossible. I quickly figured out the structure was everything. It was less about stars and more about Excel formulas.
- I created five “core narrative arcs.” These were generic storylines. One was “Initial struggle leads to surprising success.” Another was “A hidden relationship issue surfaces, forcing honesty.” Nothing specific, just frameworks.
- Then I generated a massive list of “power words.” These were words that sound like they mean something deep but are totally vague. Words like: “Alignment,” “Shift,” “Re-evaluation,” “Manifestation.” I assigned each one a number.
- For the Virgo May 2020 piece, I pulled up my internal production sheet. I plugged in the sign “Virgo” and the month “May.” The formula I cooked up spit out three randomized numbers. These numbers corresponded to the narrative arc, the financial power word, and the love power word.
- For that specific forecast, I remember it came up with the “Re-evaluation” power word for Love and the “Manifestation” power word for Money.
Once I had those two keywords, the writing was just filler. I’d open a fresh document, usually just a basic text editor to avoid distractions, and start hitting the keyboard hard. The process was mechanical. First paragraph: Fluff about how the Universe is doing stuff. Second paragraph: Introduce the “Re-evaluation” in the context of love, making sure to use phrases like “connect with your inner truth” and “seek honest dialogue,” even though it meant absolutely nothing specific. Third paragraph: Transition to money, using the “Manifestation” keyword, talking about how “focused energy” will “align with financial goals.” It was all boiler-plate.
I had to write maybe twenty-five of those every single day just to stay ahead of the workload and make the money worthwhile. The actual time spent “thinking” about the stars? Zero minutes. The time spent staring at the screen, drinking terrible coffee, and praying the internet didn’t drop out? About twelve hours a day. I would usually stop around 1 a.m., sometimes with a ringing headache from the screen glare, and just upload the whole batch to their internal system. No proofreading, no contemplation, just push and hope.
I did that for almost six months before I finally got the call back for a proper, non-content-mill job. The day I got hired somewhere else, I deleted the spreadsheet, trashed all the templates, and never logged back in. I didn’t even care about the final paycheck I was owed. The immediate relief of not having to worry about whether Leo’s career “manifestation” was aligning with their “inner shift” was worth more than a week’s pay. It was a miserable, desperate time, but it taught me that nearly everything you read online that sounds too good, or too mystical, is probably just some guy or girl on a cheap laptop trying to hit a six-dollar word count.
