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Kinhin: Why Walking Meditation Is Not a Break Between Sits But a Practice in Its Own Right

Between zazen sessions most Zen sanghas practice kinhin — slow, deliberate walking meditation. Treating it as filler misses what kinhin specifically trains.

Quick Answer

Kinhin (経行) is Zen's formal walking meditation — typically one full breath per step, very slow, performed in procession between zazen sessions. It is not a break; it is the bridge that trains integration of meditative attention into movement, the specific capacity needed for integrating practice into daily life.

Key Takeaways

  • ·Kinhin (経行, "sūtra walking") is the formal walking meditation practiced between zazen sessions
  • ·Technique: one breath per step (sometimes two per step in Sōtō, more in some Rinzai forms), slow, hands in shashu position (left hand in fist, right hand cupping it, held at solar plexus)
  • ·Function: bridges seated stillness with movement, training the specific integration required for practice to extend into daily activity
  • ·Most critical for SP-temperament meditators (see keirsey-monastic-rule article) — the walking practice where sitting practice for them would stall
  • ·Contemporary Western Zen often truncates or skips kinhin; this is a specific loss, not a modernization improvement

The standard technique

Sōtō-school kinhin (most common in Western Sōtō centers): 1. Between zazen periods, stand up in your place in the zendo. 2. Form the shashu hand position: left hand forms a loose fist at the level of the solar plexus; right hand cups the left hand; elbows slightly away from the body. 3. When the bell or clapper signals kinhin to begin, take a half-step with your right foot while exhaling slowly. 4. On the next inhalation, no movement — remain on the ball of the left foot. 5. On the next exhalation, half-step with the left foot. 6. Continue. One breath cycle produces roughly one step. 7. The procession follows a clockwise (or counterclockwise, depending on house) path around the zendo. Pacing is deliberately slow — perhaps 10–15 feet per minute. The slowness is the teaching. Rinzai-school kinhin is often faster — a brisker walking pace with one breath per step but normal stride length. Different temperaments find different versions more accessible. Both are valid.

Why slow walking specifically trains something different from sitting

Zazen trains attention while the body is still. This is one specific skill. Integrating that attention into movement is a different skill. Ordinary walking is entirely unconscious motorically. You do not attend to the sole of your foot contacting the floor, to the weight transfer, to the breath coordinating with the step. These happen, but attention is elsewhere. Kinhin's slowness forces attention into the motor sequence itself. Because the pace is too slow for habitual walking patterns to run, new attention-patterns must be built. At 10 feet per minute, each step is its own event — the heel lifting, the weight transferring, the breath matching, the sole contacting. What develops is the capacity to bring zazen's attentional quality into movement. This capacity is what allows practice to extend into daily activity — walking to the train, washing dishes, having a conversation. Without kinhin, zazen's depth tends to remain locked inside the sitting period and evaporate the moment the practitioner stands up.

The temperamental value

Some temperaments find zazen itself difficult for embodied reasons — SP-dominant types (see mbti-zen-meditation article) whose primary cognitive function is Se (extraverted sensing) tend to find pure stillness restless-producing rather than settling. For these practitioners, kinhin is often where their practice actually lands. A 30-minute zazen that felt impossible may be followed by 10 minutes of kinhin during which deep attention arrives effortlessly. SP-dominants routinely report this pattern. The appropriate response: use kinhin as your primary, not secondary, practice. Sit for 15 minutes, walk for 20 minutes, sit for 15 minutes. The emphasis on walking is traditional for movement-oriented temperaments and is not "less serious" than mostly-sitting practice. For other temperaments, kinhin serves a different purpose — it extends the attention developed in sitting into the motor system. Both uses are legitimate.

Common errors

**Ordinary fast walking**: defeats the purpose. The slowness is the mechanism. If you're walking at normal pace, you're doing walking; you're not doing kinhin. **Ornamental slowness**: walking in an exaggerated slow-mo way while not actually attending to the motor sequence. This is performance, not practice. The attention-to-sensation is the actual practice; the slowness is the means. **Hand-position fidgeting**: the shashu position is stable. Hands don't swing; elbows don't move. Practitioners who constantly readjust hands during kinhin have not settled. **Looking around**: kinhin is performed with eyes downcast, gaze soft, roughly 3–4 feet ahead. Looking around at the zendo, at other practitioners, at the exit — all signals attention has left the kinhin. **Mental drift**: easier than in zazen because the body is moving and the activity feels "active." Resist the drift. The attentional work is as rigorous as in zazen; the form makes it easier to fake rigor.

Applying kinhin outside formal periods

Once kinhin is stable in formal setting, it can be brought into daily life: - Walking from your desk to the kitchen at work - Walking from your car to a grocery store - Walking the hallway at home between rooms These are opportunities. Not every walk becomes kinhin — the ordinary pace of life can't sustain the formal slowness. But within daily walking, attention to the sensation of walking can be brought in whenever you remember. Even 30 seconds of attentional-walking during an ordinary commute extends the practice. Over time, this attention-in-movement becomes less deliberate and more spontaneous. You find yourself walking somewhere, noticing that you've been attending to the walking without having decided to, and the walking has a different felt quality. This is practice extending out of formal containers into the rest of life. Kinhin is the training that makes this possible.

FAQ

Q: Why do some sanghas practice kinhin fast and others slow?
Lineage-specific. Rinzai tradition often favors faster kinhin (near-normal pace). Sōtō tradition favors the slow version (one breath per half-step). Both descend from Chinese Chán practice which used multiple speeds. Either is authentic; pace matters less than attentional engagement.
Q: Can I do kinhin outdoors?
Yes, though it's less formal and the terrain varies. A simple practice: pick a 20-foot stretch of quiet path, walk it slowly with attention to the walking, turn, walk it back. Repeat for 10–20 minutes. Some practitioners prefer outdoor kinhin for the sensory richness of natural environment. Others find the unpredictability distracting.
Q: Is there a Theravāda equivalent?
Yes — cankama (चंकम / caṅkama), walking meditation is standard in Theravāda traditions, particularly in the Thai Forest lineage. Techniques differ slightly — Theravāda cankama often uses a dedicated walking path (cankama path) and coordinates with longer breath-phrases. Functionally very similar to Zen kinhin.
Q: Most practical written instruction?
Shohaku Okumura's Realizing Genjokoan (2010) includes specific kinhin instruction. Larry Rosenberg's Breath by Breath (1998) covers the Theravāda equivalent. For video/visual instruction: most Western Sōtō zendo websites include kinhin demonstration videos.

Related Reading

Kinhin: Why Walking Meditation Is Not a Break Between Sits But a Practice in Its Own Right - PsyZenLab - Psychology Testing Lab