
Walking Meditation
On-line Instruction with Charles
MacInerney
Walking
Meditation is a wonderful initiation for beginners into the art of Meditation.
It is easy to practice, and enhances both physical, mental and spiritual
well-being. It is especially effective for those who find it difficult
to sit still for long periods of time. Some people enjoy practicing in
a beautiful outdoor setting, like a park. Others prefer to practice indoors,
due to poor weather, or desire for privacy.
Walking Meditation
should generally be practiced for between 15 minutes to 1 hour. A 20 minute
walking meditation can also be used as a break between two 20 minute sitting
meditations, allowing 1 hour of meditation without placing undue demands
on the practitioner.
You can practice indoors
by walking around the perimeter of your largest room. If you practice
outdoors choose a scenic and quiet setting. Walk without a destination.
Wander aimlessly without arriving, being somewhere rather than going somewhere.
Start out walking
a little faster than normal, and gradually slow down to a normal walking
speed, and then continue to slow down until you start to feel artificial
or off balance. Speed up just enough to feel comfortable, physically and
psychologically. At first you may need to walk fairly fast to feel smooth
in your gait, but with practice, as your balance improves, you should
be able to walk more slowly.
Be mindful of your
breathing, without trying to control it. Allow the breath to become diaphragmatic
if possible, but always make sure your breathing feels natural, not artificial.
Allow the breath to become circular, and fluid.
Walk with 'soft vision'
allowing the eyes to relax and focus upon nothing, while aware of everything.
Smile softly with your eyes (see Mirror Exercise in Vision Chapter for
details). Gradually allow the smile to spread from your eyes to your face
and throughout your body. This is called an "organic smile"
or a "thalamus smile". Imagine every cell of your body smiling
softly. Let all worry and sadness fall away from you as you walk.
Walk in silence, both
internal and external.
Be mindful of your
walking, make each step a gesture, so that you move in a state of grace,
and each footprint is an impression of the peace and love you feel for
the universe. Walk with slow, small, deliberate, balanced, graceful foot
steps.
After a while, when
both the breath and the walking have slipped into a regular pattern of
their own accord, become aware of the number of footsteps per breath.
Make no effort to change the breath, rather lengthen or shorten the rhythm
of your step just enough so that you have 2, 3 or 4 steps per inhalation
and 2, 3 or 4 steps per exhalation. Once you have discovered your natural
rhythm, lock into it, so that the rhythm of the walking sets the rhythm
for the breath like a metronome.
After several weeks
of regular practice you may experiment with the ratios adding a foot step
to your exhalation and later to your inhalation as well. Whatever ratio
of steps-to-breath that you settle on, it should feel comfortable, and
you should be able to maintain it for the duration of the meditation comfortably.
After several months you may find your lung capacity improving. If you
are comfortable, lengthen your breath an extra step but avoid trying to
slow the breath too much or you will do more harm than good.
Notice the beauty
of your surroundings, both externally and internally. Smile with every
cell in your body.
For more information
about Walking Meditation read "Peace Is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness
in Everyday Life" By Thich Nhat Hanh Foreword by H.H. the Dalai Lama,
published by Bantam Books. This wonderful book is available on-line at
the Plum
Village Sanga Home page.
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