Man, let me tell you about June 2021. Absolute nightmare. I was working this dead-end job, right? The kind where every morning you drag yourself out of bed and already feel like you need a shower just from the thought of the commute. My boss—don’t even get me started—she was the kind of person who’d send you an email at 10 PM on a Friday and expect a reply by 7 AM Saturday. I was running on fumes.
I finally snapped. Seriously, just walked out mid-Tuesday meeting. Just got up, said something stupid like, “This spreadsheet can wait, my sanity can’t,” and I was gone. Of course, zero planning. Total financial panic set in about two hours later when I realized my rent was due in two weeks and I had precisely three figures left in my checking account. This is the exact moment you start doing dumb things.
I was scrolling through absolute crap online, trying to avoid applying for other soul-crushing admin jobs, when I stumbled onto that garbage: that ‘virgo monthly horoscope june 2021 money moves’ thing. I’m a Virgo, sure, but I never paid attention to that stuff. When you’re desperate, though, you’ll read anything. It was all flowery language about “monetizing a hidden talent” and “eschewing traditional paths for instant, localized income.” Bullcrap, but it planted a seed.

My Stupid ‘Hidden Talent’ Experiment: June 2021
My so-called “hidden talent” is fixing things. Not in a professional way, but I always seem to be the guy who can get the broken coffee maker or the old computer running again. It was just a hobby. But the horoscope, or whatever, made me treat it like a serious business plan.
Here’s the breakdown of what I actually did, step by painful step:
- I Scraped Together the Funds: I had about $800 left. I figured I needed inventory. I drove to three different yard sales and hit up the digital scrap heap section of a local resale site. I bought three broken-down laptops, two vintage gaming consoles, and a box full of tangled headphone cables. I spent nearly half my money on absolute junk.
- I Dug Deep for Knowledge: I didn’t know how to fix any of this professionally. I spent the next 72 hours straight, fueled by cheap coffee, just watching hundreds of hours of YouTube tutorials. I paused. I rewound. I screamed at the screen. I learned to solder a USB port. I learned why laptops suddenly decide they hate electricity.
- I Broke Stuff (A Lot): I attempted the first laptop repair. Slipped with the screwdriver. Poked a tiny hole in the motherboard. It was permanently dead. $250 flushed down the toilet. I wanted to quit right there. I threw the damn thing across the room.
- I Re-focused on the Local Grind: The consoles were easier. I got one of them working. Tried to sell it online. Crickets. Everyone wants a new one. The horoscope said “localized income,” right? So I pivoted. I stopped trying to sell stuff. I put up a crude post on a local neighborhood forum: “Broke your laptop? TV having a fit? I fix things cheap. No fancy talk, just results.”
That was the real money move. Not the horoscope. The sheer, stupid-ass necessity of having to pay the bills that month.
The Career Path That Showed Up, Not the One That Was Written
That first week of July 2021, my phone started ringing. Not for the refurbished console, but for a repair gig. An elderly woman down the street needed her printer hooked up. A teenager had smashed his phone screen. My hands were covered in grease, I smelled like burnt solder, and I was making fifty bucks an hour. That’s more than my corporate salary ever paid me.
The horoscope had been utter nonsense. It didn’t point me to the “best career path.” It just provided the flimsy excuse I needed to stop talking and start doing something—anything—to save my butt.
The path wasn’t “monetizing a talent” because of Jupiter aligning with something dumb. The path was forcing myself into a corner where the only way out was to solve other people’s problems with my own two hands. I had to learn, on the fly, how to manage clients, how to set prices, how to look professional even when I was fixing something on a dirty kitchen counter. I bought cheap tools and broke them. I bought better tools. I registered an LLC just so I could stop putting the money straight into my savings and pretend to be legitimate.
The job I left that June is still on the job boards, by the way, offering a few grand more than I made. But I see the listing and I just laugh. They’re still looking for some poor soul to push spreadsheets. Me? I’m booked solid this week tearing apart a server rack and troubleshooting network cards for a small business. It’s hard work, it’s messy, and I often want to cuss out the technology, but it’s mine. I built this gig from panic and $800 worth of busted electronics. The stars had nothing to do with it. The best career path? It’s the one you start building when you run out of excuses.
