Free Community Yoga Class April 4 th 2020
Free Community Yoga Class on April 4 th 2020 from 9.40 AM at the De Moksha Boutique Resort located at
Jalan Benuo, Banjar Kebilbil, Desa Belalang in Tabanan
Yoga studio is pleased to provide FREE yoga class and free usage of two natural salt water pools, infinity & organic shape.
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(Indonesian, English, Dutch, French spoken)
Yoga is an Indian legacy involving physical, mental, and spiritual practice, which aims to transform body and mind.
You will be guided by inspiring teachers through a deeper self-transformation process. The sequence is appropriate for all levels.
We provide mats for all of our yoga participants. If you would like to bring your own mat you are welcome to!
Wear something loose and comfortable.
Come and join us for yoga
Contact us for more information or to sign up
Contact (0361) 4790 790
WhatsApp +62 812 3947 5960
M0re info Free Community Yoga Class http://www.villamoksha.com/
There is a broad variety of yoga schools, practices, and goals[3] in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.[4][5][6] The term “Yoga” in the Western world often denotes a modern form of hatha yoga and yoga as exercise, consisting largely of the postures called asanas.
The origins of yoga have been speculated to date back to pre-vedic Indian traditions; possibly in the Indus valley civilization around 3000 BCE. Yoga is mentioned in the Rigveda,[note 1], also referenced in the Upanishads[8][9], but yoga most likely developed as a systematic study around the 5th and 6th centuries BCE, in ancient India’s ascetic and śramaṇa movements.[10][note 2] The chronology of earliest texts describing yoga-practices is unclear, varyingly credited to Upanishads.[11] The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali date from the 2nd century BCE,[12][13] and gained prominence in the west in the 20th century after being first introduced by Swami Vivekananda.[14] Hatha yoga texts emerged sometimes between the 9th and 11th century with origins in tantra.[15][16]
Yoga gurus from India later introduced yoga to the West,[17] following the success of Swami Vivekananda in the late 19th and early 20th century with his adaptation of yoga tradition, excluding asanas.[17] Outside India, it has developed into a posture-based physical fitness, stress-relief and relaxation technique.[18] Yoga in Indian traditions, however, is more than physical exercise; it has a meditative and spiritual core.[18][19] One of the six major orthodox schools of Hinduism is also called Yoga, which has its own epistemology, ontology and metaphysics, and is closely related to Hindu Samkhya philosophy.[20]