Why I Dug Into This Aries Career Guide
Last Tuesday felt like hitting a brick wall at work. My boss dumped three urgent projects on me while cutting my team’s resources. Classic corporate nonsense. Over burnt coffee, I remembered seeing this Aries November 2024 career thing floating around. Figured whatever, let’s see if star stuff beats my actual disaster spreadsheet.
Finding & Breaking Down the Predictions
Grabbed my phone and searched “Aries November 2024 career” while hiding in the office bathroom stall. The main points popping up everywhere said:
- Big career shifts around November 7-12
- Take bold risks especially before full moon week
- Avoid conflict with superiors mid-month
Honestly sounded like generic advice, but the timing details hooked me. Jotted down notes on a crumpled receipt about risky moves before the 15th specifically.
My Actual Moves During November
November 1st: Scheduled a meeting with my toxic project manager. Walked in on November 8th citing “market research” (total BS) and demanded to lead just one project instead of three. Almost choked saying it out loud.
November 12th: Saw our department head alone by the coffee machine. Pitched merging two teams under me casually – no slides, no fancy talk. Just raw frustration about duplicate work.
November 17th: Boss tried picking fights about deadlines. Remembered the warning and just nodded. Bought myself pizza instead of raging like usual.
What Actually Went Down
November 20th: Got called to HR expecting firing papers. Instead got offered leadership of the new merged team I’d pitched. They cited my “strategic initiative” from the coffee chat.
My old manager got reassigned after I exposed workflow issues in that first meeting. Dodged a bullet by staying quiet during mid-month chaos too.
My Takeaway Now
Did stars magically fix things? Nah. But seeing those dates gave me the kick to time my moves right. Taking the leap before the 15th felt less scary when planets supposedly backed it. Still think horoscopes are 80% nonsense, but that 20% nudged me to act when I’d usually just sulk. Worth a shot when you’re stuck.