Walking
We
can practice chanting while walking indoors or outdoors.
This form is excellent for mindfulness as well as for
calming down both mind and body. We are usually so
wrapped up in rushing from one place to another that
before we can sit quietly we need to gently slow
ourselves down. Thus, it is often helpful to begin a
longer chanting session with walking because this helps
to make the transition from hurried everyday activities
to our practice.
Unlike our usual walking as a means to get from one
place to another, often quickly and without any real
sense of where we are, our practice of walking while
chanting is slow and deliberate. While we do not become
absorbed in our surroundings, we do remain aware of
where we are and what is happening around us. Ideally,
we remain alert but are not distracted by activities
around us.
If your area for
walking is large enough, you can walk in a circle. While
walking slowly, be aware of lifting and placing your
feet upon the floor or the earth. Instead of the usual
hurried impact on the surface we are walking on, the
foot should gently touch it. Keep body movements smooth
and lithe, as with tai chi movements. During this
practice, hands are held at slightly lower than waist
level in front of us, with the back of the right hand
resting on the palm of the left and with our thumb tips
lightly touching. Walk clockwise, as this has been the
custom since the time of the Buddha.
There are two basic
forms of practicing while walking. In the faster form,
lift your right foot off the floor, or ground, and move
it forward, placing it on the floor as you chant “A”
(pronounced as “ah”). Then repeat the movement with your
left foot as you chant “mi” (pronounced as “me”). Step
again on your right foot as you chant “tuo” (pronounced
as “toaw”) and then on the left foot on “fo” (pronounced
as “faw”). In the slower method, raise your right foot
deliberately on “A” and place your foot down as you say
“mi.” Then raise your left foot on “tuo” and place your
foot down as you say “fo.” In both forms, all movements
should be deliberate and careful. While most people step
with the right foot first as described above, people at
some centers might step on the left first, so if you
attend different centers you will need to see how they
do their walking meditation.
During the walking,
our chanting may be done aloud or silently to ourselves.
Whether aloud or silent, listen to and focus on the
sound of your chanting.
Walking may be used
to break up longer periods of sitting or as the sole
form of practice. During retreats or regular chanting
sessions, some centers use walking meditation more often
since it effectively counters the drowsiness and
stiffness that can arise from prolonged periods of
sitting.
We
can also do our walking in a relatively smaller flat
path area of about twenty yards or so. When you reach
the end of the walking area, pause and then turn slowly
to your right. Stand for a few seconds and then resume
walking. Whether walking on the path or pausing before
turning around, remain focused on your chanting.
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