The title refers to the precariousness of life. "Nectar" is the drink of the gods: it is sweet, rich in nutrition, and in general refers to any delicious or invigorating drink. But what happens when put in a sieve? It of course leaks through into the ground or what ever else is beneath it, but once it leaks through the sieve, it no longer has the power to give joy and vigor. Such is the life of the protagonist: it is rich but very precarious. The rice she grows is constantly threatened by monsoons or other disasters, yet she loves it and loves to run her fingers through it for it represents life itself. Thus, nectar is equated with rice which is equated with life, and the sieve constitutes all those things that make the nectar (rice, life) difficult to hold onto.
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