Sweat Yoga DTLA
Los Angeles, California
21 studios offering meditation found near Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California
Studio offering hot & prenatal yoga classes, plus aerial dance, pottery & meditation classes.

Monterey Park, California
West Hollywood, California
Los Angeles, California

West Hollywood, California
Pasadena, California
Vinyasa, Ashtanga & other yoga classes are the draw at this intimate studio with a laid-back vibe.

West Hollywood, California

Los Angeles, California
Roomy facility with 3 yoga studios providing beginner to advanced classes, plus kid sessions.
Los Angeles, California

Santa Monica, California
Vinyasa, yin/yang & restorative yoga classes, plus regular workshops for particular poses.
Los Angeles, California
Santa Monica, California

Los Angeles, California
Relaxed yoga studio with gentle & intermediate classes, plus restorative & candlelit sessions.

Los Angeles, California
Santa Monica, California
Quaint yoga studio offering hot Vinyasa classes, plus monthly mixers & retreats.
Long Beach, California
Meditation is one of the oldest and most universally practiced forms of inner cultivation known to humanity, and for good reason. At its heart, meditation is the art of training attention and awareness — learning to quiet the relentless chatter of the mind and settle into a state of calm, clarity, and presence. People are drawn to it for countless reasons: some come seeking relief from anxiety or chronic stress, others arrive searching for deeper self-understanding, and many simply want to feel more at home in their own bodies and lives. What keeps them coming back is the quiet revolution that unfolds from the inside out — a growing sense of steadiness that begins on the cushion and ripples gently into every corner of daily life.
The roots of meditation stretch back thousands of years across multiple traditions. Some of the earliest recorded practices emerged from the Vedic traditions of ancient India, with references appearing in the Vedas as far back as 1500 BCE. Buddhist meditation techniques, codified and taught by Siddhartha Gautama in the fifth century BCE, spread throughout Asia and became foundational to countless lineages practiced worldwide today. In the twentieth century, figures like Maharishi Mahesh Yogi helped bring meditation to Western audiences, introducing Transcendental Meditation in the 1950s and famously teaching the Beatles, which sparked a cultural moment that accelerated global interest. Jon Kabat-Zinn later developed Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction in the late 1970s, creating a secular, research-backed framework that brought meditation into hospitals, schools, and corporate settings around the world.
A typical meditation session can take many forms, from guided visualizations and breath-focused awareness practices to body scans, loving-kindness cultivation, or silent sitting. Sessions might last anywhere from ten minutes to an hour, and no special equipment is required beyond a comfortable place to sit or lie down. The benefits are well documented and far-reaching — reduced cortisol levels, improved sleep quality, sharper concentration, greater emotional resilience, and even measurable changes in brain structure with consistent practice. Meditation is beautifully suited for virtually anyone, regardless of age, fitness level, or prior experience. It is especially valuable for those navigating high-stress lives, recovering from illness or injury, or anyone seeking a genuine anchor of stillness amid the noise of modern living. Whether approached as a standalone practice or woven into a broader yoga journey, meditation offers something rare and profoundly nourishing. There has never been a better moment to sit down, close the eyes, and begin.