Full Standing Bow
1. Put your hands in hapchang (palms together as shown at right), feet together.
When it is used:
- For greetings of Monks and Nuns when they are not in the Dharma Room (when we usually do a prostration).
- For entering or leaving the Dharma Room.
- Anytime you cross in front of the altar within ten feet of it, except during walking mediation, you must bow to the Buddha using this form.
- At the beginning and ending of a set of prostrations.
Prostrations
1. Start in a standing position with the feet together, and the hands in hapchang.
Alternate Form:
- Pushing off from the kneeling position with the hands to return to the standing position. This is sometimes necessary if our bodies are not well or we have bad knees or our balance is not good.
Common Errors:
- Not going all the way to the mat.
- Feet are not crossed.
- Not having hands in hapchang as you are coming up.
- Raising your hands above the base of the neck as you are coming up.
- When doing prostrations during the Homage to the Buddhas chant, paddling or flipping your feet to get your Dharma Teacher robe off your heels. The correct way is to put your hands further out in front of you (maybe a foot in front of the mat) and this will pull the robe off your heels
- During the standing bows at the beginning and ending of the prostration set, not bringing the hands up into hapchang position at the beginning and ending of the bow when the body is in the vertical position.
- Not bowing together with other people – highest ranking teacher begins the bowing and sets the pace.
108 Prostrations
Form:
- Begin in the standing bow position with you feet together and you hands in hapchang
- Do a Full Standing Bow
- Do 108 Prostrations
- At the end of the 108th Prostration come up to the kneeling position and then bow down again to the full prostration position (head touching mat) –this is often called a “half prostration”
- Return to the standing bow position
- Do a Full Standing Bow
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