thistle:
I also live in the Philippines (in Manila) and at my local church and other churches I have attended people mostly hold hands but those who don’t hold out their hands palms upturned and I have never heard of anyone complaining about that. I don’t see anything irreverent about it.
Thanks for the website.
You’re welcome

. From numerous threads about posture during the Our Father it seems to be a controversial topic in the US, some bishops explicitly prohibit holding hands and the orans posture. All I can say is check with your diocese.
By the way, I found an article at the ewtn library about this “hot” topic. To quote a few paragraphs:
*"Some readers asked if the U.S. bishops’ vote against allowing the “orantes” posture meant that this gesture was forbidden in the United States. The bishops, in deciding not to prescribe or suggest any particular gesture during the Our Father, did not therefore proscribe any particular gesture either.
The bishops’ conference decision does limit the possibility of another authority such as a pastor or even a diocesan bishop from prescribing this gesture as obligatory. But it need not constrain an individual from adopting the “orantes” posture
nor, in principle, stop a couple or small group from spontaneously holding hands.
While **holding hands during the Our Father is very much a novelty ** in the millenarian history of Catholic liturgy, the “orantes” posture, as one reader from Virginia reminds us, is as old as Christianity, is depicted in the catacombs,
has always been preserved in the Eastern rites and was not reserved to the priest until after several centuries in the Latin rite — and even then not everywhere. " * Whole article here:
ewtn.com/library/Liturgy/zlitur10.htm