Walk Like a
Buddha
Carlos Estevez, SUMMER
2011 tricycle
In
the Lotus Sutra, the Buddha is described as the most respected and
loved creature who walked on two feet. He was so loved because he
knew how to enjoy a good walk. Walking is an important form of
Buddhist meditation. It can be a very deep spiritual practice. But
when the Buddha walked, he walked without effort. He just enjoyed
walking. He didn’t have to strain, because when you walk practice
ofin mindfulness, you are in touch with the all the wonders of life
within you and around you. This is the best way to practice, with
the appearance of nonpractice. You don’t make any effort, you don’t
struggle, you just enjoy walking, but it’s very deep. “My
practice,” the Buddha said, “is the nonpractice, the attainment of
nonattainment.”
For many of us, the idea of practice without
effort, of the relaxed pleasure of mindfulness, seems very
difficult. That is because we don’t walk with our feet. Of course,
physically our feet are doing the walking, but because our minds
are elsewhere, we are not walking with our full body and our full
consciousness. We see our minds and our bodies as two separate
things. While our bodies are walking one way, our consciousness is
tugging us in a different direction.
For the Buddha, mind and the body are two
aspects of the same thing. Walking is as simple as putting one foot
in front of the other. But we often find it difficult or tedious.
We drive a few blocks rather than walk in order to “save time.”
When we understand the interconnectedness of our bodies and our
minds, the simple act of walking like the Buddha can feel supremely
easy and pleasurable.
You can take a step and touch the earth in such
a way that you establish yourself in the present moment; you will
arrive in the here and the now. You don’t need to make any effort
at all. Your foot touches the earth mindfully, and you arrive
firmly in the here and the now. And suddenly you are free—free from
all projects, all worries, all expectations. You are fully present,
fully alive, and you are touching the earth.
When you practice slow walking meditation alone,
try this: Breathe in and take one step, and focus all your
attention on the sole of your foot. If you have not arrived fully,
one hundred percent in the here and the now, don’t make the next
step. You have the luxury of doing this. Then when you’re sure that
you’ve arrived one hundred percent in the here and the now,
touching reality deeply, then you smile and you make the next step.
When you walk like this, you print your stability, your solidity,
your freedom, your joy on the ground. Your foot is like a seal.
When you put the seal on a piece of paper, the seal makes an
impression. Looking in your footstep, you see the mark of freedom,
the mark of solidity, the mark of happiness, the mark of life. You
can make a step like that because there is a buddha in
you—buddhanature, the capacity of being aware of what is going on.
There is a buddha in every one of us, and we should allow the
buddha to walk.
Even in the most difficult situation, you can
walk like a buddha. Last year I visited Korea, and there was one
moment when my group was surrounded by hundreds of people. Each of
them had a camera, and they were closing in. There was no path to
walk, and everyone was aiming their camera at us. It was a very
difficult situation in which to do walking meditation, so I said,
“Dear Buddha, I give up, you walk for me.” And right away the
Buddha came, and he walked, with complete freedom, and the crowd
made room for the Buddha to walk; no effort was made. If you find
yourself in some difficulty, step aside, and allow the Buddha to
take your place. The Buddha is in you. This works in all
situations, I have tried it. It’s like encountering a problem when
you’re using the computer. You can’t get out of the situation. But
then your big brother who is very skillful with computers comes
along and says, “Move over a little, I’ll take over.” And as soon
as he sits down, everything is all right. It’s like that. When you
find it difficult, withdraw and allow the Buddha to take your
place. You have to have faith in the Buddha within, and allow the
Buddha to walk, and also allow the people dear to you to
walk.
When you walk, who do you walk for? You can walk
to get somewhere but you can also walk as a kind of meditative
offering. It’s nice to walk for your parents or for your
grandparents who may not have known the practice of walking in
mindfulness. You ancestors may have spent their whole life without
the chance to make peaceful, happy steps and establish themselves
fully in the present moment.
It is possible for you to walk with the feet of
your mother. You can say, “Mother, would you like to walk with me?”
And then you walk with her, and your heart will fill with love. You
free yourself and you free her at the same time, because your
mother is in you, in every cell of your body. Your father is also
fully present in every cell of your body. You can say, “Dad, would
you like to join me?” Then suddenly you walk with the feet of your
father. It’s a joy. It’s very rewarding. You don’t have to fight
and struggle in order to do it. Just become aware.
After you have been able to walk for your dear
ones, you can walk for the people who have made your life
miserable. You can walk for those who have attacked you, who have
destroyed your home, your country, and your people. These people
weren’t happy. They didn’t have enough love for themselves and for
other people. They have made your life miserable, and the life of
your family and your people miserable. And there will be a time
when you’ll be able to walk for them too. Walking like that, you
become a buddha, you become a bodhisattva filled with love,
understanding, and compassion.085
WALKING MEDITATION PRACTICE
The mind can go in a thousand
directions.
But on this beautiful path, I walk in
peace.
With each step, a gentle wind
blows.
With each step, a flower blooms.
During walking meditation we walk slowly, in a
relaxed way, keeping a light smile on our lips. When we practice
this way, we feel deeply at ease, and our steps are those of the
most secure person on Earth. Walking meditation is really to enjoy
the walking—walking not in order to arrive, just for walking, to be
in the present moment, and to enjoy each step. Therefore you have
to shake off all worries and anxieties, not thinking of the future,
not thinking of the past, just enjoying the present moment. Anyone
can do it. It takes only a little time, a little mindfulness, and
the wish to be happy.
We walk all the time, but usually it is more
like running. Our hurried steps print anxiety and sorrow on the
Earth. If we can take one step in peace, we can take two, three,
four, and then five steps for the peace and happiness of
humankind.
Our mind darts from one thing to another, like a
monkey swinging from branch to branch without stopping to rest.
Thoughts have millions of pathways, and we are forever pulled along
by them into the world of forgetfulness. If we can transform our
walking path into a field for meditation, our feet will take every
step in full awareness, our breathing will be in harmony with our
steps, and our mind will naturally be at ease. Every step we take
will reinforce our peace and joy and cause a stream of calm energy
to flow through us. Then we can say, “With each step, a gentle wind
blows.”
While walking, practice conscious breathing by
counting steps. Notice each breath and the number of steps you take
as you breathe in and as you breathe out. If you take three steps
during an in-breath, say, silently, “One, two, three,” or “In, in,
in,” one word with each step. As you breathe out, if you take three
steps, say, “Out, out, out,” with each step. If you take three
steps as you breathe in and four steps as you breathe out, you say,
“In, in, in. Out, out, out, out,” or “One, two, three. One, two,
three, four.”
Don’t try to control your breathing. Allow your
lungs as much time and air as they need, and simply notice how many
steps you take as your lungs fill up and how many you take as they
empty, mindful of both your breath and your steps. The key is
mindfulness.
When you walk uphill or downhill, the number of
steps per breath will change. Always follow the needs of your
lungs. Do not try to control your breathing or your walking. Just
observe them deeply.
When you begin to practice, your exhalation may
be longer than your inhalation. You might find that you take three
steps during your in-breath and four steps on your out-breath. If
this is comfortable for you, enjoy practicing this way. After you
have been doing walking meditation for some time, your in-breath
and out-breath will probably become equal: 3-3, or 2-2, or
4-4.
If you see something along the way that you want
to touch with your mindfulness—the blue sky, the hills, a tree, or
a bird—just stop, but while you do, continue breathing mindfully.
You can keep the object of your contemplation alive by means of
mindful breathing. If you don’t breathe consciously, sooner or
later your thinking will settle back in, and the bird or the tree
will disappear. Always stay with your breathing.
After you have been practicing for a few days,
try adding one more step to your exhalation. For example, if your
normal breathing is 2-2, without walking any faster, lengthen your
exhalation and practice 2-3 for four or five times. Then go back to
2-2. In normal breathing, we never expel all the air from our
lungs. There is always some left. By adding another step to your
exhalation, you will push out more of this stale air. Don’t overdo
it. Four or five times are enough. More can make you tired. After
breathing this way four or five times, let your breath return to
norma1. Then, five or ten minutes later, you can repeat the
process. Remember to add a step to the exhalation, not the
inhalation.
After practicing for a few more days, your lungs
might say to you, “If we could do 3-3 instead of 2-3, that would be
wonderful.” If the message is clear, try it, but even then, only do
it four or five times. Then go back to 2-2. In five or ten minutes,
begin 2-3, and then do 3-3 again. After several months, your lungs
will be healthier and your blood will circulate better. Your way of
breathing will have been transformed.
When we practice walking meditation, we arrive
in each moment. When we enter the present moment deeply, our
regrets and sorrows disappear, and we discover life with all its
wonders. Breathing in, we say to ourselves, “I have arrived.”
Breathing out, we say, “I am home.” When we do this, we overcome
dispersion and dwell peacefully in the present moment, which is the
only moment for us to be alive.
You can also practice walking meditation using
the lines of a poem. In Zen Buddhism, poetry and practice always go
together.
I have arrived.
I am home
in the here,
in the now.
I am solid.
I am free.
In the ultimate
I dwell.
As you walk, be fully aware of your foot, the
ground, and the connection between them, which is your conscious
breathing. People say that walking on water is a miracle, but to
me, walking peacefully on the Earth is the real miracle. The Earth
is a miracle. Each step is a miracle. Taking steps on our beautiful
planet can bring real happiness.