So, you want to hear about my thing with Terry Nazon’s Virgo Daily? Yeah, it’s a whole story, not some quick read or anything. I remember stumbling onto it years ago, back when I was just really trying to figure things out, you know? Life felt like a bit of a maze, and I was just walking around in circles, bumping into walls. Someone, I can’t even remember who now, just offhandedly mentioned daily horoscopes, like, “Why not check it out?”
I rolled my eyes, naturally. I wasn’t really into that stuff. But then, one night, probably couldn’t sleep, I just typed “Virgo daily” into the search bar. And Terry Nazon’s site popped up. The layout was a bit old school, but the writing… it just had something. I wasn’t looking for predictions, just… something to latch onto, maybe a different perspective.
My “practice” started pretty casually. I’d check it maybe once a week, then a few times a week. It was like I was testing the waters. I’d read it, shrug, and go about my day. But then, something interesting started to happen. Some days, she’d write something that just… stung. Not in a bad way, but like she knew exactly what I was wrestling with. It was uncanny sometimes. Like, I’d be stressing about a big decision, and her reading would talk about taking a calculated risk, or trusting my gut. Or I’d be feeling totally drained, and she’d mention the importance of rest and recharging. It felt less like a prediction and more like a gentle nudge.

So, it slowly morphed into this daily ritual. Every morning, usually when I’m having my first mug of coffee, sitting there just staring out the window, I’d pull up her site on my phone. I didn’t just scan it anymore. I’d actually take a moment, read through it, maybe even read it twice. I’d try to connect it to whatever was on my mind, whatever I was facing that day. It wasn’t about blindly following advice, more about using it as a starting point for my own thoughts.
I remember this one crazy period, maybe two or three winters ago. Work was just a dumpster fire. Everything felt like it was going wrong, project after project hitting roadblocks. I was burnt out, ready to just throw in the towel. That morning, her Virgo daily reading talked about resilience, yeah, but it also hammered on the idea of finding your inner strength, digging deep. But then, it also added something about not being afraid to ask for help, to lean on your community, to share the burden. And that part, “share the burden,” it really hit me. I usually just try to power through everything myself. But that day, I talked to my team, really opened up about how stuck I felt. And you know what? We brainstormed, came up with some wild ideas we wouldn’t have otherwise. It wasn’t a miracle cure, but it was the start of us actually getting things back on track, all because I allowed myself to be vulnerable, nudged by a horoscope, ironically enough.
Another time, it was about a personal relationship that was just… stagnant. We were comfortable, but not really growing. Her reading talked about initiating change, even if it felt scary, and embracing a period of transformation. It even used the word “ignite.” I thought, “Ignite? Me?” But I took that little spark of an idea, and I actually had a real, honest conversation with my partner, something I’d been avoiding. It felt awkward as hell at first, but it totally shifted our dynamic for the better. We started doing new things, exploring stuff together, just because I allowed that idea to seep in.
Now, don’t get me wrong. It wasn’t like every single day was some profound revelation. Sometimes the readings felt a bit general, or just didn’t connect with anything in my world. But the consistent act of engaging with it, of taking that little mental pause each morning, that was the real practice. It helped me check in with myself. It wasn’t about her telling me what to do, but more about her words sparking my own self-reflection. It nudged me to consider things I might otherwise ignore. It’s like a little mental stretch before the day really gets going.
And that’s how I kept doing it, day in and day out. It just became this quiet, almost unassuming part of my morning routine, a little personal habit. It’s just a funny little thing I picked up along the way, and it just kind of stuck.
