Man, I gotta tell you about this wild thing I saw. I’m out there, just trying to clear my head, right? Been dealing with this long-running corporate mess—you know, the kind where you put in the work but the politics just eat you alive. The air was misty, felt thick and heavy, like the whole world needed a scrub down. Then, BAM. This thing appears.
It wasn’t one of those bright, curved rainbows with all the colors. This one was just… white. Almost ghostly. A fog bow, they call it, scientifically speaking. But when you’re standing there and your gut is telling you this is more than just water vapor, you start digging into the spiritual side. That’s always been my way—see something weird, figure out what it’s trying to tell me about my current mess.
The Initial Dumpster Dive (Finding Nothing)

I hit the usual spots online. Search, search, search: “white rainbow meaning.” What did I get? A lot of flowery nonsense. “Purity.” “A new beginning.” “Peace and tranquility.” All high-level, good-vibes stuff. None of it felt actionable. I’m thinking, okay, purity is great, but my life at that moment was a dumpster fire of bad contracts and betrayal. I needed a field manual, not a poem. What did I actually need to do next?
This is where the real work started. Because the universe doesn’t send you a sign just to tell you to chill out. It sends you a sign when a big move is required.
Why Was This Sign So Personal?
See, I only got serious about deciphering this because of what had happened a few months prior. I finally sold the old family place, the one I inherited, the one that had been a headache since day one. I mean, plumbing problems, a leaky roof that required constant patching, and this low-grade constant stress over property taxes. It was a money pit, but it was family, so I felt this obligation to hold onto it.
I finally pulled the trigger and sold it, deciding to use the money to fund a new personal venture—a clean break from that soul-sucking corporate life. I had a clear path laid out. Then, two weeks after closing, the buyer tried to sue me over some undisclosed minor issue that popped up after closing. Lawyers got involved. Everything froze. The clean break I fought for turned into another legal and emotional quagmire. I was toast. I had traded one mess for a much meaner, more expensive mess.
The morning I saw that white rainbow, I had just hung up with my lawyer—another hour of talking circles, getting nowhere. I stepped outside and there it was. Pure white. That’s what got me thinking: the usual advice of “peace” was useless. I wasn’t peaceful. I was ready to rage-quit life.
The Practice: From Symbol to Strategy
I decided to treat the white as a practical instruction manual for the immediate future. Forget “purity.” I focused on “clarity” and “deletion.”
This is what I went and did, step-by-step:
- Step 1: Stop Trying to Fix the Old Mess. I realized the legal fight was just another version of me patching that leaky family roof. Endless, draining effort. The white color meant the whole slate needed wiping, not just a corner. I immediately instructed my lawyer to switch from an aggressive defense to offering a low, final, take-it-or-leave-it settlement just to make the buyer go away. It felt wrong, like giving in, but my goal was deletion, not winning.
- Step 2: Strip Down Everything Else. I looked at my schedule and my contacts list. I saw all these people and commitments that were either draining my energy or just ‘nice-to-haves’ that didn’t serve the new business goal. If it didn’t equal immediate income or immediate joy, I cut it. I went from six board meetings a month down to two. I archived all non-essential contacts. Ruthless deletion. The ‘white’ was an instruction to remove anything that wasn’t essential framework.
- Step 3: Define “Start Over” (The White Page). This was the hardest part. The white was a blank page. You can’t write on a blank page until you know your first sentence. I spent 48 hours locked in a room doing nothing but structuring the first three months of my new business. No social media, no news, just structure. It forced the abstraction of “new beginning” into specific, budgeted tasks.
The Payoff: Action is the Real Purity
The irony is, the minute I made the decision to prioritize deletion (Step 1), the lawsuit drama lost all its power over me. I sent the settlement offer. It was accepted quickly, saving me thousands in legal fees later on. I paid them off and walked away. No win, no big victory speech. Just a clean break, finally.
That white rainbow wasn’t telling me, “You are pure.” It was demanding that I create purity through immediate, sometimes painful, action. It was a command: stop clinging to the muddy past, stop trying to salvage bad situations, and start deleting everything until you are left with a blank page you can actually write on.
I realized the whole “purity” thing everyone talks about is something you have to earn with clear boundaries and tough decisions. It doesn’t just happen. Now, I’m three months into the new venture, moving faster and clearer than I ever did in my old life. If you see a white rainbow, don’t meditate on peace. Ask yourself: What needs to be deleted right now? That’s the real next move.
