My Secret Public Journal
A Window Into My Thoughts, Left Unlocked.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Walking for Peace (2026)
“Peace is every step.” ~Thich Nhat Hanh
I begin with this sentence because it names what this painting asks of me. Not admiration. Not agreement. Practice. Debbie Taylor-Kerman’s recently completed image of monks walking for peace does not feel illustrative or explanatory. It feels instructional. Like the sentence itself, it does not point beyond the moment it depicts. It insists on the step that is already happening.
The monks in the painting are moving, but nothing about them suggests urgency. Their pace is deliberate, almost restrained. Their bodies overlap and soften at the edges, as if repetition has worn down the need for sharp distinction. They do not look toward the viewer. They are not headed toward a visible goal. The walk is the work. I find myself slowing as I look, drawn into the rhythm implied by their stride.
I stay with the image the way I stay with a practice. I notice how little narrative it offers. There are no signs, no slogans, no climax toward which the figures advance. Instead, there is posture. Weight. Balance. The painting seems to say what the Tao Te Ching says without ornament: “The Tao does nothing, yet nothing is left undone” (ch. 37). The monks do not appear to be doing peace. They are keeping it.
When I look at this painting devotionally, I see walking meditation rendered visible. Each figure appears absorbed in the mechanics of movement: foot lifting, foot landing, breath coordinating with step. This is not symbolic walking; it is practiced walking. In Buddhist tradition, walking meditation is not secondary to sitting. It is sitting translated into space. The body becomes the text. The ground becomes the teacher. The Dhammapada describes wisdom not as brilliance, but as steadiness: “Just as a solid rock is not shaken by the storm…” (v. 81). These monks look like rocks in motion—unmoved, yet progressing.
The painting keeps drawing me back to the bodies themselves. Their partial translucence feels important. They are present, but not dense. It is as if the discipline of attention has thinned the boundary between inner and outer life. I read this as devotion rather than protest. Or perhaps more precisely, devotion expressed as protest. The monks do not confront the world with force. They offer themselves to it, step by step.
My own experience of zazen shapes how I remain with this image. Zazen has taught me that stillness is not passive. It is exacting. One sits upright, attentive, unfinished. Nothing is resolved, but nothing is avoided. When I look again at Taylor-Kerman’s monks, I see that same posture translated into movement. Walking meditation becomes zazen under pressure—carried into streets, into visibility, into risk. The painting does not let me separate inner discipline from outward presence. The two are fused in the figures’ stride.
What continues to hold me is how private the act remains, even in public. Each monk walks among others, yet each appears inwardly alone. Breath is not shared. Attention cannot be delegated. The street becomes a zendo not because it is quiet, but because the practitioners refuse to abandon the practice when quiet is unavailable. The psalmist’s command to “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalms, 46:10) feels unexpectedly aligned with this image. Stillness here is not immobility. It is coherence.
The painting also carries a lineage within it. I cannot look at these walking bodies without thinking of Mahatma Gandhi’s Salt March, another moment when walking became moral speech. Gandhi understood that the body itself could tell the truth when words were insufficient. Yet Taylor-Kerman’s work does not historicize that insight. It refuses distance. This is not a memory of walking. It is walking now.
That contemporaneity matters devotionally. The monks are not safely finished. Their walk has no caption announcing success or failure. Like the teaching in the Bhagavad Gita “You have a right to action, but not to the fruits of action” (2.47) the painting releases outcome. It binds attention to fidelity. The monks walk because walking keeps them aligned, not because it guarantees peace.
As I continue to look, the painting turns the question back toward me. How do I move through the world? Do I carry the stillness I practice into the spaces where it is most tested? Or do I reserve devotion for private moments and surrender the rest to urgency? The monks’ anonymity makes this question unavoidable. They could be anyone. They could be me. They are defined not by identity, but by posture.
I notice again how the figures repeat. Step follows step. There is no crescendo. This repetition feels liturgical. It mirrors the repetition of breath in zazen, the repetition of prayer, the repetition of attention returned again and again. The painting does not ask me to believe anything. It asks me to remain.
I return, finally, to the sentence that hovers over the image like a quiet rubric: “Peace is every step.” Taylor-Kerman’s painting does not illustrate this line; it enacts it. Peace is not promised beyond the frame. It is contained within it. It is contained within each footfall, each aligned body, each refusal to rush.
I leave the image without resolution, but not without instruction.
The monks are still walking.
The step is still available.
This, for me, is devotion.

