I was a mess in the summer of 2018, just absolutely burnt out. My job in corporate logistics was killing me slowly. Every day I walked in, I felt like I was walking into a cement mixer. You know the feeling, where you read a horoscope just because you’re desperate for any kind of external validation, even if you don’t believe in it?
That’s where I started. I remember sitting in my tiny, depressing cubicle in late August, staring at my screen. I pulled up the Virgo Career Horoscope for September 2018. The prediction was some vague stuff about “a critical, fated confrontation leading to an unexpected, significant financial breakthrough by the month’s end.” My first thought was, yeah, right. My second thought was, what if?
So, I decided to treat it like a strange, low-stakes science experiment. I grabbed a cheap notebook—the kind with the speckled cover—and scrawled the prediction right on the top. The process began. I committed to tracking every little piece of workplace drama, every near miss, and every terrible meeting, just to see if the stars were somehow watching my train wreck of a career.
For the first two weeks of September, nothing happened. Things were just the standard, dreary grind. I logged pages of boring notes: “Sept 5th: Karen complained about the coffee again. No confrontation.” “Sept 12th: Budget meeting was a snooze fest. No breakthrough.” I was ready to toss the notebook into the bin and forget the whole ridiculous idea.
Then, the “confrontation” part of the forecast slammed into me sideways, and it had almost nothing to do with the job itself. That week, my landlord, an absolute monster, decided to hit me with some absurd, illegal rent increase. I tried to reason with him, but he just laughed and told me to move out. I spent two days stuck in a paralyzing anxiety loop, unable to focus on work, unable to sleep.
I was a zombie when I walked into the office on September 20th. My boss, Barry—a guy who loved to micromanage spreadsheets—demanded I stay late to re-do a ridiculous report for the third time. He started in on me, the usual passive-aggressive nonsense. I snapped. I looked at him, remembered the landlord, and felt this sudden, white-hot clarity.
I stood up, told him I wasn’t staying, and that he could stick his report somewhere uncomfortable. I threw my keys on his desk and marched out. I didn’t say “I quit.” I just left. I burned the corporate bridge and watched the sparks fly. It was a completely irrational, career-ending act, but it was the confrontation. I had my life forced out from under me.
I spent the next ten days feeling that stomach-sinking terror of being unemployed. I was fighting the landlord, staring at my savings tanking, and then, the second part of the prediction, the “significant financial breakthrough,” showed up from the most absurd place.
Back in July, I had done a small consulting favor for a guy I met on a hiking trail. He ran this niche online business selling old map reproductions. I spent maybe two nights setting up his inventory system and automating his invoicing. He paid me a paltry fee but promised a tiny commission on the first major deal that closed after the system went live.
I forgot about it completely. I wasn’t expecting anything. But late on September 28th, I received an email. That guy had closed a massive deal with a university library in Europe, and because his new system had processed the order, my tiny commission translated into a huge, four-figure payout. I stared at the screen. It wasn’t millions, but it was enough to cover my landlord troubles, buy me three months of breathing room, and fund my entire pivot away from logistics.
The September 2018 Career Review: The Final Tally
- The “Fated Confrontation” (Predicted): Happened. Was it fated? No, I was just too damn tired to take any more crap. I forced it.
- The “Unexpected Financial Breakthrough” (Predicted): Absolutely came true. It arrived literally days after I got fired, providing the safety net I desperately needed.
- My Main Takeaway: The prediction didn’t make it happen. It made me expect something, and that expectation pushed me to act when the opportunity (or, in this case, the breakdown) presented itself.
That huge, unexpected check allowed me to step away from the corporate garbage forever. I leaned into the only skill that had actually paid me well—building simple, clean systems for small businesses. I started my own consultancy and never looked back. I saw Barry’s name pop up on LinkedIn a year later; he was still managing the same terrible spreadsheets. He even sent me an email, asking if I could come back for a week to “fix” a client file he couldn’t figure out. I didn’t reply.
That messy September 2018 wasn’t about the stars; it was about the fact that sometimes, you just need to burn it all down to find the accidental fortune you already created for yourself.
