The author focuses on walking as a therapeutic process and suggests ways in which walking can be incorporated into the therapeutic setting. The use of the labyrinth, a spiral circular path that guides the walker into the center and out again, is discussed, and it is suggested that walking a labyrinth for client and therapist can be a powerful activity as the movement itself around the circular path provides a connection and can lead into deeper relationship. Two clinical examples are provided in which therapeutic walking and walking the labyrinth were used.