Kula: A New Approach to Yoga
The mission of Kula Yoga Community is to create and support a community of yoga students linked by the common desire for healthy bodies, mental clarity and spiritual well-being. Kula embraces various types of yoga finding common ground in the belief that yoga is transformative in all it’s forms.
Opening on the wave of interest generated by the new movie Eat, Pray, Love, Kula Yoga Community will begin its class schedule on Labor Day, September 6. The mission of co-founders and teachers Amanda Brenner and Dana Goudie is to create and support a community of yoga students linked by the common desire for healthy bodies, mental clarity and spiritual well-being.
Kula, the sanskrit word for community, is the inspiration behind this new yoga venture. Modeling their approach after Power Yoga teacher Bryan Kest’s popular studios in California, class tuition will be entirely donation-based. Goudie says, “We want to remove obstacles that keep people from experiencing the benefits of a regular yoga practice. With typical class prices ranging from $10-15, we recognized cost was one of the obstacles.”
Offering classes such as Lean on Me, Ya-Ya Yoga and Hot Yoga Party, Kula is taking an unconventional approach to building their schedule by offering fun and approachable styles. Brenner says, “There is a class for everyone, even kids!”
Classes will be offered at Conscious Mile Center for Spiritual Living in Mobile and Eastern Shore Dance Academy in Daphne. For a schedule and more information, visit KulaYogaCommunity.org or call 251-202-YOGA.























August 26th, 2010 at 11:35 pm
Our city is about to become a communicity
linked with the similarity of BREATH! inhale! (now!)