I gotta be honest with you, rice never meant anything to me beyond dinner. It was just white filler on the plate, cheap and easy. But a few months back, I ran across some wild story—you know the one—about cooked rice and how your emotions change how it molds. It sounded like the biggest load of spiritual garbage ever, but I was going through a really rough patch. My energy felt totally drained, and I needed something tangible, something physical, to anchor myself.
I figured, okay, let’s test this crazy idea. Why not? What did I have to lose besides a few scoops of Basmati?
My Three Jars Experiment: Setting the Stage
The first step was simple, but I treated it like a real ritual. I drove straight out and picked up a big bag of rice. I needed a fresh slate. Back home, I cooked a whole pot, making sure it was perfect—not too sticky, not too watery. Then I grabbed three identical glass jars that I usually use for leftover jam.

I divided the rice equally. This was the critical part, the preparation. I slapped three different labels on them. The labels weren’t neat; I used a thick black Sharpie and just scrawled the words on.
- Jar One (The Positive): I wrote “LOVE. THANK YOU. YOU ARE WONDERFUL.” I aimed for total, unbridled appreciation.
- Jar Two (The Negative): I wrote “HATRED. YOU ARE STUPID. I WISH YOU WERE GONE.” I focused on pure, toxic rejection.
- Jar Three (The Neglected): This one got nothing. No label, no words. I made a conscious decision to ignore its existence.
I sealed them all up tight and placed them on a high kitchen shelf, away from direct light, so they all shared the exact same environment.
The Daily Practice: Speaking the Energy
I followed a strict schedule. Twice a day, morning and evening, for three full weeks, I went through the motions. This wasn’t some quick mental thought process. I spoke out loud.
For Jar One, I held it in both hands, really concentrating on sending it good, strong, happy vibes. I spoke the words, thanking the rice, almost like talking to a plant. I focused on feeling grateful just for the fact that it existed. It felt awkward the first few days, but I pushed through.
Then I moved to Jar Two. I dumped every bit of stress, frustration, and negativity I had into it. I yelled at it, not screaming loud enough for the neighbors to hear, but speaking the words with absolute anger and contempt. It acted as a great pressure release, honestly.
And Jar Three? This was the commitment. I walked past it. I didn’t look. I didn’t touch. I forced myself to act like the spot on the shelf where it sat was completely empty. It was the rice of total neglect.
The Unavoidable Truth: The Spiritual Core of Rice
By the end of the first week, things were starting to change. The “HATE” jar started smelling vaguely sour, and a little gray film formed on top. The “LOVE” jar looked fine, maybe just a little condensation.
But when I reached the two-week mark, the differences were stark. The “HATE” rice was covered in thick, dark-green and black mold. It stunk so bad I had to hold my breath when I got near it.
The “LOVE” jar had mold, sure, it’s food, it was going to mold. But the mold was predominantly white and fluffy, almost clean-looking, and it smelled sweet and earthy. It was a natural decomposition process. It didn’t feel toxic.
Then there was Jar Three. The neglected one. The sight of it stopped me cold. It wasn’t just moldy; the entire mass of rice had dissolved into a putrid, black, watery slime. It looked like pure, unadulterated rot. It didn’t just decay; it collapsed into nothing. The neglect was ten times worse than the hatred.
And that is the spiritual meaning of rice, the lesson I pulled from my own hands-on practice: attention is everything. Negative attention causes ugly, toxic things to grow. Positive attention allows natural, healthier cycles to occur. But no attention at all? That causes the total collapse, the black, heavy, lifeless rot.
I know this is the real deal because it mirrored exactly what I went through myself a while back. I thought it was the external BS—the arguments, the stress, the pressure (my ‘HATE’ jar)—that was taking me down. I spent all my energy fighting those battles.
But while I was busy raging externally, I completely neglected my own internal care—my sleep, my food, my quiet time—my own Jar Three. I didn’t hate myself; I just ignored myself. And that is what caused the anxiety attacks and the burnout that landed me on my couch for two months, feeling like a pile of heavy, black slime.
My body was the neglected rice. It didn’t just break down; it totally collapsed because I forgot to even acknowledge it. Now, I use that practice every single day. I force myself to look at my internal Jar Three and say something, even if it’s just, “Hey, I see you.” Because neglect kills faster than any focused negativity ever could.
