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8 common mistakes people mostly commit while worshipping the Tulsi plant

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 16, 2025, 16:00 IST
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8 common mistakes people mostly commit while worshipping the Tulsi plant

Few plants are revered in Indian homes the way Tulsi is. She is not treated as décor or greenery but as family. Water is offered before the first sip of the day, prayers are whispered, and quiet moments are spent beside her. Yet, despite this reverence, many people unknowingly make mistakes while worshipping Tulsi. Not out of disrespect, but habit, half-knowledge, or rushed routines passed down without understanding. These small actions are believed to affect the sanctity of the ritual and the intention behind it. Scroll down to know the most common mistakes and why they matter.

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Plucking Tulsi leaves at the wrong time

One of the most common mistakes is plucking Tulsi leaves after sunset or at night. Tradition holds that Tulsi rests during the evening hours, and disturbing her then is believed to disrupt her energy. The most respectful time is early morning, after bathing and before meals. If leaves are needed for worship later in the day, they should be plucked beforehand and stored carefully.

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Offering water in the evening

Tulsi is offered water as a form of seva, but watering her in the evening or at night is traditionally discouraged. Excess moisture during cooler hours can harm the plant both physically and symbolically, as Tulsi is believed to rest during this time. Morning, with sunlight and fresh air, is considered the most appropriate moment, when she is most receptive in both a botanical and spiritual sense.

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Using Tulsi leaves for Shivling abhishek

This surprises many. Tulsi is deeply sacred, yet she is traditionally not offered on the Shivling. Puranic texts speak of a vow associated with Tulsi, according to which she is not placed on Shiva during worship. This practice is not about ranking deities or diminishing reverence. It reflects respect for distinct spiritual narratives, vows, and boundaries that coexist within Sanatan traditions, where devotion also means honouring the unique relationships each deity shares with sacred elements.

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Touching Tulsi without basic cleanliness

Approaching the Tulsi plant casually - without washing hands, brushing teeth, or after returning from outside, is another common oversight. Tulsi worship is considered a sattvic act. Cleanliness here isn’t about ritual rigidity, but intention. The plant is treated as a living embodiment of purity, and approaching her mindfully is part of the devotion.

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Overwatering or neglecting the plant

Devotion does not replace care. Some people water Tulsi daily even when the soil is already moist, while others rely only on prayer and neglect sunlight, drainage, or soil health. Tulsi thrives on balance, with well-drained soil, adequate sunlight, and mindful watering. A struggling plant reflects imbalance in care, not a lack of faith.

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Worshipping during periods traditionally avoided

During certain periods such as sutak after a birth or death, eclipses, or specific hours like Ekadashi night, Tulsi worship is traditionally paused. These pauses are not prohibitions or fear-driven rules. They symbolise rest and respect, acknowledging transitions, grief, or cosmic shifts, and allowing the space and energy to settle before worship resumes.

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Treating Tulsi worship as a checklist

Perhaps the most subtle mistake is turning Tulsi worship into a rushed routine - light the diya, pour water, move on. The practice is meant to be gentle, unhurried, and mindful. A brief pause, a quiet mantra, or even silent gratitude carries meaning. When presence is missing, the act turns mechanical, and the deeper essence of the ritual quietly fades.

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The deeper idea behind Tulsi worship

Tulsi isn’t worshipped for outcomes alone. She represents resilience, healing, balance, and quiet strength. The rules around her aren’t meant to intimidate but to cultivate awareness. Most mistakes don’t come from disrespect - they come from forgetting that Tulsi is seen as alive in every sense. A being who responds to care, timing, and intention. When worship becomes conscious instead of compulsive, even the simplest act like offering water with folded hands, becomes complete. Tulsi doesn’t demand perfection; she responds to sincerity.

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