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Walking meditation, sometimes known as kinhin (Chinese: 經行; Pinyin: jīngxíng; Romaji: kinhin or kyōgyō; Korean: gyeonghyaeng; Vietnamese: kinh hành), is a practice within several forms of Buddhism that involve movement and periods of walking between long periods of sitting meditation.[1] In different forms, the practice is common in various traditions of both Theravada and in Mahayana Buddhism.

Members of Kanzeon Zen Center during kinhin

Practice

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Practitioners typically walk clockwise around a room while holding their hands in a gesture with one hand closed in a fist while the other hand grasps or covers the fist (Chinese: 叉手; pinyin: chā shǒu; rōmaji: shashu).[2] During walking meditation each step is taken after each full breath.[3] The pace of walking meditation can be either slow (several steady steps per each breath) or brisk, almost to the point of jogging.[2]

Etymology

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The term kinhin consists of the Chinese words , meaning "to go through (like the thread in a loom)", with "sutra" as a secondary meaning, and , meaning "walk". Taken literally, the phrase means "to walk straight back and forth."

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Maezumi & Glassman 2002, pp. 48–9.
  2. ^ a b Aitken 1999, pp. 35–6.
  3. ^ "Kinhin". Empty Bowl Zendo. Retrieved April 1, 2015.

Sources

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Bibliography

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