Yoga Classes at Dharma Yoga. Three Options Available.
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- Buddhism-inspired classes
- Passionate instructors
- Classes accompanied by world music
Yoga is a much easier way to exercise both mind and body than testing Einstein's theory of relativity by racing a beam of light. Avoid a science-related sprain with today's Groupon to Dharma Yoga. Choose from the following options:
- For $5, you get one drop-in yoga class (a $15 value). This option is valid for new clients only.
- For $36, you get six yoga classes (an $85 value).
- For $49, you get one month of unlimited yoga classes (a $150 value).
Dharma Yoga's accomplished instructors calm student's minds and exercise their bodies by leading them through traditional yoga poses and teaching Buddhist principles. Classes carve out oases of calm in the hectic daily landscape of commuting, cooking, and building doghouses out of paper clips. In Dharma Yoga classes, students' minds drift through guided Buddhist meditation sessions as their bodies move through moderately paced Hatha flow postures; stretchers in Gentle Hatha classes pose to indigenous Tibetan music and the folk tunes of Bob Dylan. A candlelit studio hosts Restorative Dharma Yoga's stretching, which draws on a relaxing fusion of meditation and Thai massage techniques.
Need To Know Info
About Dharma Yoga
At Dharma Yoga’s 2,400-square-foot studio, flickering candlelight gives the earth-tone hues and gleaming hardwood floors an inviting glow. Like stumbling into a lounge-singer convention, the studio’s comforting vibes relax the mind with calming music as the band of certified instructors gently guides students of all experience levels through a series of healing physical postures. Though classes vary in style—ranging from vigorous early-bird Vinyasa flow to relaxing end-of-day Dharma nightcaps—each session explores traditional Indian yoga and Buddhist practices, referring to itself as an "awareness-based mindfulness and relaxation practice." At Dharma Yoga, students can choose from 27 weekly classes, held throughout the day.
In the course of more than 20 years of teaching and practicing yoga, Dharma Yoga founder Keith Kachtick, an Austin native, has served as the senior instructor with the Lineage Project, a nonprofit that offers meditation and yoga practice to prisoners in the New York City area. Keith has also contributed his yogic philosophies to publications such as Yoga Journal, Newsweek, and the New York Times. His codirector, Camilla, has a master’s degree in social work and a background as a clinical therapist. These experiences fuel her nurturing teaching style, especially in yoga-therapy sessions, which are designed to help to release physical, emotional, and mental tension.