Okay so yesterday morning I was scrolling through my usual feed and stumbled on this horoscope title screaming Your Virgo Horoscope for August Will Surprise You Find Out Why. Normally, I don’t really believe in this stuff, you know? It’s fun, like reading fortune cookies. But hey, “surprise”? That word got me curious. So, I thought, why not actually try living by today’s advice as an experiment? Document it like I do with my other projects. Let’s see what happens.
The Setup
First, I grabbed my phone and pulled up the full horoscope details. The main advice for Virgos today was weirdly specific: Embrace the unexpected detour. Say yes to the small, spontaneous thing you’d normally ignore. That was it. Kinda vague, right? But “spontaneous thing”? Okay. I decided to interpret this literally. Today, I wouldn’t plan my usual work blocks. I’d leave gaps. And crucially, I’d actively look for that small “yes” moment. Alarm set on my phone every 2 hours as a reminder: Find Spontaneous? Game on.
The Morning Attempt
Started normally with coffee. First alarm buzzes at 9 AM. Working on email. Felt kinda silly. What “spontaneous thing”? My neighbor waved hello over the fence while taking out trash. Normally, I’d wave back quickly and disappear inside. But… “spontaneous”? Okay. Instead, I put my mug down, walked over, and actually asked about her vegetable garden. We talked tomatoes for ten whole minutes. It was… nice? Unexpectedly pleasant. Didn’t change my life, but it was a tiny human connection I usually skip. Small win?
The Lunchtime Weirdness
Had lunch at my desk. Alarm buzzes at noon. Eating leftovers. Phone rings – unknown number. Spam? Normally, ignore. But… “say yes”? Ugh. Answered it. It was a delivery guy downstairs! He had a package for my building but couldn’t find the manager’s apartment number. Super trivial. Normally, I’d say “Sorry, not sure” and hang up. “Say yes”… Fine. I went downstairs, met him at the main door, walked him around to the manager’s side entrance. Took three minutes. Felt like an unnecessary detour. Annoyed at first. Got back to cold noodles.
But then…
Couple hours later, same delivery guy shows up at MY door with my actual package – a book I’d ordered. He grins: “Hey, thanks for earlier! Made my next stops easier. Saw this was yours and figured I’d save you a trip downstairs later.” Whoa. Tiny, tiny act of returned kindness I never expected. Wouldn’t have happened if I’d ignored the call. That was the first little genuine surprise.
The Evening Thing That Actually Made Sense
Late afternoon. Prepping dinner. Last alarm buzzes at 4 PM. Tired. Brain fried. Saw an email pop up from my editor. “Quick text review? Need thoughts on the new intro by tonight?” My plan was gym, cook, shower, maybe read. Normally? I’d groan and ask if tomorrow morning works. But… “spontaneous thing?” And honestly, the tomato chat and the delivery guy made me kinda open. Felt less rigid. So I replied, “Yeah, send it over. Can take a quick look now.” Read it while pasta boiled. Sent feedback. Simple.
Bigger Surprise: My editor replies literally minutes later: “Perfect! That intro idea is gold. Actually, we’re moving the deadline up. You just saved my butt pushing this to layout tonight!” Turns out, layout schedule shifted unexpectedly midday. My usual “tomorrow?” would have stressed him out, and maybe delayed things. My dumb little “yes” actually had real, practical impact. Felt useful. That was the second, bigger surprise.
What Actually Happened
So, was I surprised by mystical forces aligning my stars? Nah. Not really. But the article was right – I was surprised. Why? Because pushing myself to follow that advice – actively seeking small “yes” moments all day – put me slightly off my usual rigid Virgo autopilot.
- I talked to someone instead of hiding.
- I helped someone I didn’t need to.
- I did a small work thing right away instead of delaying.
These actions put me in different places at different times, interacting with people slightly differently. And THAT chain reaction of tiny choices? It led to two genuinely nice surprises that wouldn’t have happened if I’d stuck to The Plan. The surprise wasn’t in the prediction; the surprise came from the action it inspired.
Experiment verdict? Fun! Won’t turn me into a horoscope devotee, but proves sometimes leaning into randomness, even forced “spontaneity,” shakes stuff loose. Might try more theme days based on dumb advice now and then. Keeps things interesting!