Experiment 7: Interesting Results with Mung Beans
- Craig Morrin
- Aug 4, 2025
- 3 min read
My name is Craig Morrin. I have been building meditation pyramids for over two decades now, and I have decided to embark upon the crazy and most dubious quest to do something that has never been done, ever before: to prove through scientific experiments that pyramid energy actually exists. Subscribe and follow me every step of the way on my rise to eternal pyramid glory...or falling flat on my face.
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07-25-25:
In this experiment, I decided to try sprouting 10 mung beans each in 1-ounce plastic containers. I started with about 30 of them and removed any that looked deformed or extremely small. I then randomly choose 10 for each container and then flipped a coin to determine which one would be inside the pyramid and which one would be outside.

I added 4 teaspoons of water to each container and placed them on their pedestals, letting them soak for 14 hours. I then poured the water into new containers, placed each batch of beans on paper towels, and then added 3 teaspoons of dry sand to each container and then 1.5 teaspoons of water from the original soaking, and then placed the beans on top.

The reason I didn't push them into the wet sand is because if they were to have different depths, that could make them come up faster or slower and skew the results. I then placed them back on their pedestals to let them do their thing.

The next day, I noticed that things were drying out on the surface, so I added two equal sections of fully saturated wet paper towels on top of each sample.

Two days later, on 07-29-25, the paper towels were bone dry. The beans were starting to sprout, so I removed the paper towels and then added more water on top. I was about to go on a camping trip, so I wasn't sure if they would dry out before I got back.

Here is a close up of the beans inside the pyramid after watering them:

And here is a close up of the beans outside the pyramid after being watered:

I got back three days later, and this is what they looked like:

They were a bit dry, but still growing. Here is a close up inside the pyramid:

And the one outside the pyramid:

I added a little water to each and then waited a couple of more days, and here is what they looked like 9 days into the experiment:

And this is what they looked like side-by-side, with the pyramid sample on the left:

As you can see, the mung beans inside the pyramid are noticeably larger. However, as I have said many times before, one experiment is not proof. It needs to be repeated to rule out random chance. Also, while I did make efforts in this experiment to make their exposure to light as similar as possible, it is possible that the pyramid sample might have had slightly more, skewing the results. So in my next experiment, I have devised a way to essentially eliminate that possible confounding variable, while keeping the rest of the experiment essentially the same.
Stay tuned.
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If you would like to conduct your own experiments or to have your own experiences with pyramids, you can check out what I have to offer in my shop.
And finally, if you have had more interesting results in your experiments with pyramids than I have, please share them with me.





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