Does changing physical location during a bread meal require retroactive blessing (birkat hamazon) before leaving?
Synopsis
Whether leaving one's place during a meal of bread requires reciting Grace After Meals retroactively before departing.
More in Dessert During a Meal
When companions are left behind during meal interruption, does this exempt all departing members from blessings?
2 opinions
Does eating from multiple trees in a garden require separate blessings for each tree?
2 opinions
When finishing a meal in a different location than where it began, where is Grace After Meals recited?
1 opinions
Which foods require blessing after consumption in their original location?
3 opinions
Is prayer in the midst of a meal considered an interruption requiring separate blessings?
1 opinions
Is light sleep (sheinat ara'i) during a meal considered an interruption?
2 opinions
Within a single house/room, does moving from one corner to another constitute change of location?
1 opinions
Does initial intention to eat in a different location exempt one from treating it as change of location?
2 opinions
Related from other topics
Must one have kavvanah (intention/concentration) during the Amidah, and which blessings require it?
Kavvanah in Prayer
If one failed to concentrate during the Avot blessing, must one repeat the Amidah?
Kavvanah in Prayer
If one urgently needs to pass gas during prayer and cannot hold back, must one walk backward four cubits before doing so?
Bodily Needs During Prayer
Does the requirement to complete the Amidah before Kaddish apply only in Ma'ariv (where there is no Kedushah), or also in Shacharit and Minchah?
Individual Additions to Prayer
What blessing should one recite before beginning a journey?
Weekday Prayer Variations
Is one required to juxtapose the blessing of Redemption (Ga-al Yisrael) directly to the Amidah prayer without any interruption?
Shaliach Tzibbur — Prayer Leader
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
The Daily Law
One question. Every opinion. Every morning.
A new halakhic question and the full spectrum of rabbinic thought, delivered daily.