
Bhakti Yoga CR
Curridabat, San José
21 studios offering asana found near Costa Rica

Curridabat, San José
San Pedro, San José
San José, San José

San José, San José
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Escazu, San José Province

Heredia Province

Pozos, San José Province
Manuel Antonio, Provincia de Puntarenas
Alajuela, Provincia de Alajuela

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste
Tranquil resort with free breakfast & daily yoga, plus an outdoor pool & an Ayurvedic spa.
Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste

Nosara, Provincia de Guanacaste

Tulum, Quintana Roo
Tulum, Quintana Roo

Tulum, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo

La Veleta, Quintana Roo
Tulum, Quintana Roo

Tulum, Quintana Roo

Tulum, Quintana Roo
Asana is the physical practice of yoga — the art of moving the body into intentional shapes, held with breath and awareness, that forms the foundation of nearly every yoga class practiced in the modern world. Derived from the Sanskrit word meaning "seat" or "posture," asana is the third of the eight limbs outlined by the sage Patanjali in the Yoga Sutras, composed around 400 CE. Though Patanjali originally described asana as simply a steady, comfortable seat for meditation, the tradition evolved dramatically over centuries. By the time yoga reached the West in the twentieth century, asana had blossomed into a rich physical discipline encompassing hundreds of postures designed to strengthen, stretch, align, and awaken the body from head to toe. Practitioners love it because it meets them exactly where they are — offering challenge and stillness, effort and ease, all on a single mat.
The modern asana renaissance owes much to the great teachers of twentieth-century India. Krishnamacharya, often called the father of modern yoga, systematized physical postures and passed his knowledge to luminaries including B.K.S. Iyengar and K. Pattabhi Jois, who brought precise alignment-based practice and dynamic flowing sequences respectively to global audiences. Their work, alongside countless other lineages, gave rise to the vast landscape of styles practiced today — from slow, restorative holds to vigorous vinyasa flows. A typical asana session might begin with gentle warm-up movements and conscious breathing, progress through a sequence of standing, seated, balancing, and twisting postures, and conclude with a period of deep rest in savasana. Sessions can range from thirty minutes to two hours and may be practiced in a heated room, a serene studio, or simply an open patch of floor at home.
The benefits of a consistent asana practice are as varied as the postures themselves. Physically, regular practice builds functional strength, improves flexibility and joint mobility, supports healthy posture, and can ease chronic tension held in the back, hips, and shoulders. Mentally, the deliberate pairing of movement and breath cultivates present-moment awareness, reduces stress, and trains the mind to find calm within discomfort — a skill that extends far beyond the mat. Asana is beautifully suited to a wide range of people, from curious beginners and desk-bound professionals to athletes seeking greater mobility and older adults looking to maintain vitality. Whatever the starting point, the practice grows with the practitioner, revealing new layers of insight with every session. There is truly no better time than now to step onto the mat and discover what asana has to offer.