My Process for Creating the July Taurus Predictions
So, I woke up early Tuesday wanting to tackle the Taurus July forecast. First thing? I grabbed my coffee and pulled out my giant astrology notebook – yeah, the one with coffee stains everywhere.
I plopped down at my kitchen table, flipped open my laptop, and fired up two websites I trust for planetary movements. Jupiter moving into position jumped out at me right away. “Whoa,” I thought, “that’s gonna shake things up for Taurus.” Scribbled that down in my notebook real quick.
Next, I needed to figure out what this actually means for Tauruses. I stared at the screen, scrolling through my notes from last July. Noticed Venus would be hanging around Taurus early in the month. “Okay, cool,” I mumbled, “that’s gotta be about love or cash, feels kinda sweet.” Poured myself another coffee; this stuff takes fuel.
Then came the messy part. Mercury goes backwards smack in the middle of the month! Groaned out loud. Remembered how confusing this was last time. Pulled up my old blog posts where readers talked about tech disasters during Mercury retrograde. Tried to connect that classic Taurus stubbornness to it. Took a bunch of notes:
- How Tauruses might dig their heels in over misunderstandings?
- Why double-checking emails suddenly feels crucial?
- Whether travel plans could go sideways?
Sat back, stretched my shoulders – getting stiff. Wondered, “How do I make this not sound scary?” Decided to frame it like, “Hey, slow down, check stuff, it’ll pass.” Less doom, more “you got this”.
Struggled most with Saturn’s influence later in the month. Felt heavy. Didn’t want it to sound like a lecture. Rummaged through my journal. Found that entry from last Saturn transit where I felt super focused on one big project. Ding! Lightbulb moment. “Tauruses,” I wrote, “this is your time to actually finish that stubborn thing you’ve been putting off.” Translated Saturn’s vibe into practical Taurus energy.
Finally, mashed it all together. Started typing the predictions directly into my blog editor. Forced myself to keep it short per point. Rambled at first, then cut it back hard. Proofread it twice, drank the now-cold coffee grimacing, then hit Publish. Felt that mix of relief and “hope folks find this useful”.