My Thought Process: Dissecting August’s Constellations

占星师 星座评论1阅读模式

Okay, so the task is: write about which constellations are "born" in August, specifically for a Chinese audience. But it's not just about them, it's gotta feel like me writing it. No robotic crap. No "firstly," or "in conclusion." It needs to be raw, opinionated, and… well, human.

First, I break it down. The main players are Leo (狮子座) and Virgo (处女座). Leo: the fiery, attention-seeking drama queen. Virgo: the meticulous, detail-oriented… let's say, special person. They both dominate August, so I've got a framework. I need to make them feel like people I've actually known. I want to capture the heat, the humidity, the vibe of August.

I’m already thinking about sensory details: the oppressive heat, the way cicadas buzz, that smell of impending thunderstorms. This isn't just a list of facts; it's a mood. This whole thing needs to read like a stream of consciousness, a rant, a confession, all the things that make me… me.

I need to focus on structure: Opening (senses, the "August mood"). Leo Section (energy, drama, ego). Keywords are key: 狮子座 , 耀眼 , 自尊心 . I need to be slightly cynical, but also affectionate, because everyone loves that Leo friend who needs the spotlight. Then, there's the transition around August 23rd: the shift, the subtle change in the air. Time to move on to Virgo.

My Thought Process: Dissecting August’s Constellations

Next, Virgo Section (detail, critique, the end of summer cleanup). Now I have to go hard on this one. I know how people view Virgos, but let's delve a bit into 处女座 , 强迫症 , 细节控 . I have to empathize with that struggle. It's not just annoying; it's an inherent burden. They are always cleaning up after everyone else. And they need more. After that, I wrap it up with some kind of personal reflection. I can think about time passing, the shift between seasons.

The writing needs to flow , not feel like a textbook. So, that means: no "Leo is a fire sign, ruled by the Sun" – no robots. Instead: "Leo is the guy who walks into a room and turns the volume up, even when nobody asked.” I'm already mentally drafting stuff: "August heat. Sticky, humid…". I'm remembering that friend, Xiao Wang.

As I draft, I'm already self-correcting. I'm imagining the reader in front of me. I'm thinking about the length—at least 1000 words. So, more stories, personal observations, descriptions of that specific smell of a storm in late August, and the smell of jasmine by a schoolyard at the end of summer. This is all about bringing the text to life.

And then the constraints: Must be in Chinese, no intros/outros, bold keywords, varied sentences, human tone. All of that is now on my checklist. Make sure to use Chinese words, expressions, and phrases like "坦白说" and "那种感觉."

Once I'm done writing, I'll go back and check. Does it sound like me? Check. Keywords bolded? Check. Over 1000 words? Double-check. I'll make sure to hit that word count by focusing on specific behavioral traits.

Finally, I'll start with something like, "八月是什么味道的?" (What does August taste like?) and go from there. This has to be genuine, not some canned response. "八月生日什么星座" included? Yes. Okay, let's write.

 
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  • 本文由 占星师 发表于 2026年5月8日15:57:46
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