Man, 2018 was a tough year for me, career-wise. I was kinda floating, felt like I was stuck in mud, really. Nothing felt right, no clear path, just a lot of “what ifs” and “should I just quit?”. Every morning felt like dragging myself to something I wasn’t really feeling. I was really scraping the bottom for some kind of sign, anything to tell me what to do next. It was a proper rut, you know?
So, as 2018 was winding down, and everyone was talking about New Year’s resolutions and fresh starts, I was just looking for a lifeline. I remember scrolling through some random stuff online late one night, probably avoiding real work, and I stumbled upon some daily horoscopes. I’d always kinda scoffed at them, but man, I was desperate. I saw one for Virgos – that’s me – specifically about career for 2019. And I thought, “What the heck? Couldn’t hurt, right?”
My Weird Little 2019 Career Experiment
I decided then and there, I’d track my daily career horoscope for the whole of 2019. Yeah, I know, sounds a bit mad. But I figured, if nothing else, it’d be a weird personal project. My routine became pretty simple:

- First thing in the morning, coffee in hand, I’d pull up a few different horoscope sites. I didn’t just stick to one, because they often varied, and I wanted a broader “forecast.”
- I’d quickly scan for the career section, especially for Virgo. Sometimes it was a whole paragraph, sometimes just a sentence.
- I’d jot down the key phrases or any specific “warnings” or “opportunities” for my career that day. Nothing too fancy, just a quick note in a small journal I kept just for this. Things like “exercise caution in negotiations” or “unexpected opportunity arises.”
- Throughout the day, I’d keep these little notes in the back of my mind. Not obsessively, but just as a gentle nudge. When something came up at work, I’d mentally check against what the horoscope said.
- At the end of the day, I’d quickly reflect. Did anything from the horoscope actually manifest? Did I react differently because I had that little “forecast” in my head?
It was fascinating, really. Some days, it was uncanny. There’d be a horoscope saying something about communication issues, and sure enough, I’d have a misunderstanding with a colleague. Other days, it’d be completely off the mark. But that wasn’t really the point for me.
What I started noticing was how it shifted my mindset. If a horoscope said, “Be bold today, take a chance,” I’d find myself more willing to speak up in a meeting or pitch an idea I’d been holding back on. If it warned about “potential disagreements,” I found myself approaching conversations with a little more care and patience, trying to head off any conflict.
It wasn’t that the stars were magically dictating my day. Far from it. What was happening was that I was using these little daily prompts as a way to engage with my work more mindfully. It became a weird form of daily self-coaching. When it gave a positive spin, I felt a slight boost of confidence. When it gave a cautious one, I tended to be more thoughtful and less impulsive. It was like having a tiny, slightly kooky, daily advisor in my pocket.
I definitely didn’t get a promotion because a horoscope told me to. And my career didn’t suddenly skyrocket just because I was tracking these things. But what it did do was give me a framework for reflection that I desperately needed. It forced me to actually think about my career, my interactions, and my decisions on a daily basis, even if the prompt was something as silly as “today is good for networking.”
By the time 2019 wrapped up, my career path wasn’t perfectly clear, but it was certainly a lot less hazy than when I started. I’d made some shifts, taken some small risks, and navigated some tricky waters, not because the horoscope told me exactly what to do, but because the daily check-ins made me more aware of my own actions and reactions at work. It was a strange little journey, but one that genuinely helped me get through a really uncertain time in my professional life. Sometimes, you find clarity in the most unexpected places, even if it’s just a bunch of vague predictions about what the universe has planned for you.
