#200 Bring Mantra & Devotion Into Your Yoga Classes
Join us on Zoom starting Sunday/Monday!
After a life changing journey through India, I am so very excited to be back in Bali and shifting gears into all I have happening in March. I am still processing everything I learned and everything we experienced as a group in India. I have about a week until the next 200 Hour YTT arrives, and meanwhile I have one new online class starting this week (and the only class I’ll have running for the next month whilst I’m leading the YTT: it’s the Bali Bhakti Flow!
Why did I start offering the Bali Bhakti Flow? This is the fourth time I’ll be running this series, and it goes for twelve weeks this time.
Over the years, many yoga teachers have told me the same thing:
“I feel confident teaching asana… but I want to bring more depth into my classes.”
If you’ve ever felt that way, this class series is for you.
Bali Bhakti: Mantras for the Heart is a devotional yoga class series designed to help yoga teachers expand beyond the physical practice and explore one of the most beautiful traditions in yoga: Bhakti Yoga, the path of devotion.
In this series, we explore how mantra, chanting, meditation, and heart-centered practices can deepen both your personal practice and the way you teach yoga.
Each class includes movement, mantra, meditation, and teachings on Bhakti philosophy — creating an experience that nourishes the heart while offering tools you can bring directly into your classes.
As a yoga teacher, you’ll also receive lesson plans for each session, so you can learn how to structure and share these practices with your own students if you feel inspired.
Inside the series, you’ll explore:
• The meaning and power of traditional mantras
• How sacred sound can calm the nervous system and focus the mind
• The stories and symbolism behind different deities and devotional practices
• Ways to incorporate mantra, chanting, and heart-centered themes into your classes
Many yoga teachers discover that Bhakti practices reconnect them with the deeper purpose of yoga — connection, devotion, and the opening of the heart.
If you feel called to explore this side of yoga more deeply, I would love to practice with you.
You can learn more and join the series here:
With love,
Alexandra


