You may have so many other things going on that you can’t keep track of when the breath is coming in or going out, but you should be able to maintain a sensitivity to the energy tone in the body.
"[Walking meditation] gets you used to maintaining your center in other
activities as well, so that even when you’re engaged in complex
activities, even when you’re thinking about things, you can still have a
sense of inhabiting the body, being centered within the breath. You may
have so many other things going on that you can’t keep track of when
the breath is coming in or going out, but you should be able to maintain
a sensitivity to the energy tone in the body — where it’s relaxed,
where it’s tight, what you can do to keep it relaxed and comfortable in
all situations. You’re inhabiting the body. You’re not going off
entirely into some other thought world. This keeps you grounded. It
gives you a place to return to as soon as you’ve done whatever work
needs to be done in that thought world."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Walking Meditation: Stillness in Motion" (Meditations4)
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