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Glossary›Movement Meditation

Glossary

Movement Meditation

Movement meditation is a contemplative practice that uses physical motion—walking, dancing, or flowing forms—as the primary object of awareness to cultivate mindfulness and spiritual insight.

What is Movement Meditation?

Movement meditation is a practice that integrates mindful physical activity with meditative awareness, using the body in motion as a focus for attention rather than seated stillness. Unlike conventional seated meditation, practitioners engage in deliberate, often repetitive movement patterns—from the slow walk of Buddhist kinhin to the ecstatic whirling of Sufi dervishes—while maintaining present-moment awareness. The practice treats motion itself as both the method and the object of meditation, dissolving the boundary between movement and stillness.

Origins & Lineage

The earliest documented meditation practices involving movement appear in Vedantism around 1500 BCE, though historians believe such practices may have existed as early as 3000 BCE. Between 600-500 BCE, Buddhist India and Taoist China developed distinct movement meditation forms.

Walking meditation (Chinese: 經行; jīngxíng; Japanese: kinhin) is a meditation practice done while walking common in Buddhism. The Buddha emphasized walking meditation and walked many miles himself during his lifetime. Chinese meditation includes movement practices such as the Daoist forms of Tai Chi and qigong breathwork. Qigong emerged from five major traditions: Confucian, Buddhist, Daoist, medicine, and martial arts.

Sufi whirling is a form of physically active meditation which originated among certain Sufi groups, practiced by dervishes of the Mevlevi order within the sema worship ceremony to reach greater connection with Allah. The origins of Sufi whirling can be traced back to the 13th century in Konya, Turkey, where it was first practiced by followers of the renowned Sufi poet and mystic, Rumi.

In the late 20th century, Western practitioners synthesized movement and meditation in new forms. Gabrielle Roth created the 5Rhythms approach to movement in the late 1970s; there are now hundreds of 5Rhythms teachers worldwide. 5Rhythms is a movement meditation practice devised by Gabrielle Roth drawing from Indigenous and world traditions using tenets of shamanistic, ecstatic, mystical and eastern philosophy.

How It’s Practiced

Movement meditation takes varied forms across traditions. In Theravāda walking meditation, practitioners walk a straight path back and forth, often 30 to 40 feet long, placing attention on sensations in the feet, sometimes silently noting “lifting,” “moving,” and “placing”. In Zen Buddhism, kinhin is often done between stretches of sitting meditation (zazen) as a break from prolonged sitting. During kinhin, practitioners walk around a room clockwise between periods of zazen, holding a specific body position throughout and moving very slowly—kinhin is thought to be the walking meditation with the slowest pace.

Qigong may be divided into two categories: movement qigong which includes bodily movement, and static qigong which includes sitting or standing meditation with no added movements. Qigong and Tai-Chi are traditional self-healing exercises originating in ancient China, characterized by coordinated body posture and movements, deep rhythmic breathing, meditation, and mental focus.

In Sufi whirling, dervishes aim to reach greater connection with Allah through abandoning ego or personal desires, by listening to music, focusing on God, and spinning the body in repetitive circles. The dervish spins counterclockwise with one hand raised towards the sky to receive divine blessings and the other hand pointing towards the earth to channel those blessings to humanity.

The 5Rhythms practice consists of five rhythms—Flowing, Staccato, Chaos, Lyrical and Stillness—which when danced in sequence are known as a “Wave”. The practice is said by Gabrielle Roth to put the body in motion in order to still the mind.

Movement Meditation Today

Contemporary seekers encounter movement meditation through diverse channels. Buddhist meditation retreats routinely alternate sitting with walking meditation periods. Anyone who goes on a Buddhist meditation retreat will be familiar with the practice of interspersing periods of sitting meditation with a walking meditation practice. Tai chi and qigong classes are widely available in community centers, hospitals, and studios. Sufi communities continue sema ceremonies, though in 1925 Turkey ordered dissolution of all Sufi fraternities; in 1954 the Turkish government granted the Mevlevi order special permission to perform for tourists during two weeks each year.

In 2017 there were 396 certified 5Rhythms teachers and SpaceHolders in 50+ countries. Ecstatic dance and conscious movement communities have proliferated globally, offering weekly gatherings where participants move freely to curated music. Online classes and apps now provide guided movement meditation accessible from home.

Common Misconceptions

Movement meditation is not simply exercise with awareness added as an afterthought. The movement itself is the meditation practice, not a warm-up or supplement to “real” seated meditation. Kinhin is sometimes explained as “walking zazen” or “zazen in motion,” but zazen literally means “seated meditation”—kinhin is what Zen practice looks like when we walk, not a lesser version of sitting.

Nor is movement meditation about achieving particular states of bliss or trance, though such experiences may arise. The goal in walking meditation is to develop mindfulness by staying present through the act of walking, cultivating concentration and calming restlessness while training the mind to observe phenomena without attachment or aversion. It is not a performance or choreographed dance requiring athletic ability—most forms welcome practitioners of all ages and physical capacities.

Movement meditation does not originate from a single culture or tradition. Meditation has existed before recorded history and separately originated in many cultures across the globe, including at least China, India, and Palestine—it is an innate practice, the natural result of introspection.

How to Begin

Start with walking meditation, accessible to most bodies and requiring no special equipment. Find a private path 30-40 feet long, indoors or outdoors. Walk slowly, placing full attention on the sensations of each step—heel touching ground, weight shifting forward, foot lifting. When the mind wanders, gently return attention to the feet. Begin with 10-15 minutes.

For structured guidance, seek local Zen centers offering kinhin instruction, qigong or tai chi classes at community centers, or 5Rhythms workshops. The Insight Meditation Society and Spirit Rock Meditation Center in the United States teach Vipassana walking meditation during retreats. Jon Kabat-Zinn’s body scan practices incorporate mindful movement elements accessible through recordings.

Gabrielle Roth’s books Sweat Your Prayers: Movement as Spiritual Practice and Maps to Ecstasy: Teachings of an Urban Shaman provide entry to 5Rhythms philosophy. For qigong, Roger Jahnke’s The Healing Promise of Qi offers comprehensive introduction. Thich Nhat Hanh wrote extensively on walking meditation in books like The Long Road Turns to Joy.

Related terms

vipassanamindfulnessqigongtai chiecstatic dancezen meditation
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