So, the whole “Daily Mirror Virgo: Daily tips” thing, you wanna know how that even came about? Man, it wasn’t some grand plan, I’ll tell ya. It started with me just kinda grumbling to myself one morning, looking at those generic horoscopes. You know the ones. “A great opportunity awaits you today!” or “Beware of an unexpected encounter!” Like, what does that even mean? I wanted something real, something you could actually use when you spilled coffee on your shirt or couldn’t decide what to eat for lunch. Something a bit more… Daily Mirror, you know? Punchy, direct, a bit like your nan giving you advice.
I figured, if I was going to do this, it had to be for Virgos. Why Virgos? Well, I know a bunch of ’em, and they’re all about the details, the practical stuff, the “how-to.” They don’t want airy-fairy predictions; they want a to-do list, basically. And most of the horoscope stuff out there just wasn’t cutting it for their meticulous brains. So, that was the initial spark.
Getting My Hands Dirty: The Process

First off, I just started observing. I’d watch my Virgo friends, listen to their gripes, their triumphs. What kinda stuff makes their day better? What stresses them out? It quickly became clear it was usually the small things: a messy desk, an unexpected change of plans, not having a clear agenda. So, the “tips” had to hit that sweet spot.
I grabbed a spiral notebook – yeah, old school, right? – and just started jotting down every single little practical bit of advice I could think of. Things like, “Double-check that email before hitting send,” or “Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good today.” Just a stream of consciousness, really. It was a complete mess. Pages and pages of random thoughts.
Then came the real headache: making it daily. How do you come up with something fresh every single day without just repeating yourself? I thought, maybe I could just pull from a big list. So, I typed all those notebook scribbles into a giant spreadsheet. Column A was the raw idea. Column B was trying to put a “Virgo spin” on it. Column C was making it sound like something from a newspaper. This was probably the most grueling part. Some days I’d stare at that screen for an hour, just blank.
I quickly learned I couldn’t just have a static list. It’d get stale fast. So, I started categorizing. I broke down typical Virgo concerns into buckets: work, relationships, health, planning, self-care, even just general efficiency. Then, I’d try to pick one from each category every week and twist it into a daily tip. So, Monday might be a work tip, Tuesday a relationship one, and so on. This gave me some structure.
The “Daily Mirror” part wasn’t just about tone; it was also about being snappy. I looked at how they phrase things in actual newspapers – short sentences, strong verbs, a bit of direct address. I’d write a tip, then read it aloud. If it sounded wobbly or too formal, I’d chop it up, simplify the words. Like, instead of “It is advisable to consolidate your various financial commitments,” it became “Tidy up your finances. One bill at a time.” Much better, right?
The Grind and the Grin
For the first few months, it was a proper grind. I’d set an alarm, first thing every morning, to write that day’s tip. Sometimes I’d forget, then scramble, trying to conjure something up during my lunch break. It felt less like creative writing and more like homework. There were days I almost gave up, just thinking, “Who even cares about these little tips?”
But I kept at it. What really pushed me through was when friends started actually mentioning them. “Hey, that tip about decluttering your desk? Did it, totally worked!” Or, “Today’s tip hit home a bit too hard, you watching me or something?” That was the good stuff. It wasn’t just my little personal project anymore. People were actually finding a tiny bit of help or a chuckle in it.
Eventually, I got into a rhythm. I started batch-writing a week’s worth on a Sunday afternoon. That made the daily publishing so much easier. It freed up my mornings, and I wasn’t rushing. It wasn’t about being a psychic or an astrologer; it was about offering a small, practical nudge, a little relatable moment for the day. Seeing people connect with that? That’s what made the whole messy, fun, sometimes frustrating process worth every single word.
