You know how it is. You’re right there on that cusp, Virgo and Libra. Every morning, I’m sitting there, coffee getting cold, trying to figure out which dumb horoscope site I should check first. Do I go full Virgo and worry about details and service, or do I lean Libra and obsess over balance and who’s going to make the next move? It was honestly a complete waste of time, every damn day.
My Stupid Daily Forecast Project
I finally got fed up maybe six months ago. The forecasts were always so vague they never helped anything. They’d say something like, “A conversation today will bring clarity, but watch out for tensions with a loved one.” Seriously? That’s just a normal Tuesday for anyone with a pulse. I decided to hell with it. I was going to stop reading them and start making a personalized one. I figured if I was going to read crap, it might as well be my own crap, customized just for my messy love life.
Step One: Collecting the ‘Ingredients’

I thought this would be simple, I really did. I didn’t want to get into the deep-end astrology stuff—aspects, houses, retrogrades. Nah. My focus was love, so I just zoomed in on the two main players: Venus (Love) and Mars (Action/Conflict). I just needed to know where they were each day. I found some simple, free tables online that just listed the current sign for those two big planets and how long they’d be hanging out there. It was super dry and technical looking, but I managed to copy and paste the next three months’ worth of data into a basic spreadsheet. This was my whole ‘data set’—a complete mess of signs and dates.
Step Two: Designing the ‘Logic’
This is where the real fun started. I had to create a set of rules. I wasn’t doing actual astrology, I was doing psychology with a star-chart filter. My brain just mapped out basic feelings:
- If Venus was in a ‘friendly’ sign for my dual Virgo/Libra nature (like Taurus or Pisces), the message needed to be positive. Something about harmony or comfort.
- If Mars was in a ‘challenging’ sign (like Aries or Capricorn), the message had to be a warning. Something about friction or a fight.
- If both were neutral or one was good/one was bad, I’d mix the message. That’s the classic vague horoscope move, right?
I sat there for hours, just mapping out every possible combination. Venus in Gemini + Mars in Scorpio? That’s a “Miscommunications are high, but your partner is deeply committed—stay cool and don’t push it.” See? Simple. Just a motivational note dressed up in star talk.
Step Three: Building the Damn Machine
I used a simple spreadsheet. I’m not a coder, so I wasn’t writing anything fancy. I just used a bunch of basic logic statements, the simple IF/THEN stuff you learn in high school computer class, to pull a pre-written sentence based on the current date and the planetary positions I already pasted in. The spreadsheet looked like a complete disaster. Column A was the date. Column B and C were the signs. Column D was where the ‘magic’ was supposed to spit out the daily prediction.
The first day I ran it, it just said, “Today brings great passion and energy into your home life. Use this momentum to tackle a shared goal.” I actually laughed out loud. It was so generic, so fake, but it was mine. I felt a weird sense of accomplishment.
What I Learned from Messing Around
I ran this simple little system for about four weeks straight. Every morning, I’d check my own generated forecast before I started work. Here’s the crazy part: it was always right. Or at least, it felt right. If the forecast said, “Today is a low energy day for communication,” I would subconsciously hold back and assume things were a bit tense, and guess what? They felt tense. If it said, “Use your charm and focus on beauty,” I’d dress better and be extra nice, and guess what? The day felt charming.
The practice wasn’t about the planets or the signs or the whole Virgo/Libra confusion. The practice was about the systematic creation of a daily thought process. I wasn’t reading a prediction; I was reading a prompt for how I should approach the day. It turns out, my DIY horoscope was just a very elaborate, slightly chaotic way to give myself a daily pep talk, sometimes a warning, and sometimes just a simple thing to focus on.
I stopped using the spreadsheet eventually. The lesson was already learned. Those vague forecasts are just mirrors. They just reflect whatever intention you put into them. I had spent all that time building a system to trick myself into focusing, and it worked. Now, when I see those simple love forecasts, I just remember my messy spreadsheet and know that the real forecast is just whatever intention I set for myself when I pour that first cup of coffee.
