Brian Caruso knows what it feels like to be lost. After relocating 1,000 miles to Greenville, South Carolina, with his wife to start a new business, the venture closed in under two years. They nearly lost their house. His wife found a second career in higher education. Caruso, despite applying to more than 200 jobs, was left without a clear path. That experience became the catalyst for Wayfinder Convergence, a new website launching today that offers personalized orientation reports for adults at a crossroads.
WayfinderConvergence.com is not another astrology or Human Design platform that generates a generic report from a birth date. Instead, it requires a detailed intake form where clients share their lived experience, current crossroads, and specific questions. That biographical data is woven into a report that converges five systems: Western Astrology, Vedic Astrology, Human Design, Gene Keys, and Numerology. The result is a bespoke written report designed to help individuals answer the question, 'What now?'
'There is a kind of silence that comes after a business ends. Not the dramatic kind. The worse kind. The kind where you still have to make dinner, answer emails, parent your child, keep your marriage alive, pay the mortgage, and somehow carry the burden that something you believed in did not land,' said Caruso. He began exploring frameworks like astrology, Human Design, Gene Keys, and numerology during that period of deep despair. He found them individually useful but ultimately incomplete. 'Almost none of it told me what to do with Monday morning, or spoke to me from my lived experience,' he added. 'I did not build Wayfinder from theory. I built it from the middle.'
The launch arrives as millions of adults are quietly wrestling with similar questions. On Reddit, communities like r/findapath and r/midlifecrisis have become crowded digital town squares, filled with daily posts from users sharing stories of career stalls, identity loss, and the search for a meaningful next act. Broader data backs this up. According to the AARP Public Policy Institute (citing U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data from May 2026), 38.4% of unemployed workers age 55+ have been job-hunting long-term (27+ weeks), compared with 26.6% of jobseekers aged 16–54—nearly 1.5 times the rate. Meanwhile, a Forbes report citing survey data from SideHustles.com (April 2025) found that half of all U.S. workers are actively considering changing industries, with Gen X leading at 57%.
Wayfinder is not therapy, medical advice, financial advice, legal advice, or prediction. It is an orientation instrument for anyone standing at a threshold—whether they arrived there through collapse, loss, a milestone birthday, or the quiet recognition that their current map no longer serves them. The service offers four tiers: the Wayfinder Diagnostic ($500) includes a 6-page report and a 15-minute session; the Wayfinder Life ($1,000) includes a 12-page guide and a 30-minute session; the Wayfinder Extended ($2,000) includes a 35-page report and a 60-minute session; and the Wayfinder Career ($1,250) includes a 16-page career-focused report and a 30-minute session.
Caruso's core philosophy is that individuals are not lost, but the terrain has shifted. 'This is not about giving you a generic map that anyone with the same birth date gets. The map needs to read your specific terrain,' he said. 'The collapses were not proof that I was lost. They were the terrain that built the guide.'
For more information, visit WayfinderConvergence.com.

