
Yoga in Daily Life Brisbane
Newstead, Queensland
22 studios offering hatha found near Fortitude Valley

Newstead, Queensland

Bulimba, Queensland
Paddington, Queensland

West End, Queensland

West End, Queensland
Camp Hill, Queensland
Murarrie, Queensland

Holland Park, Queensland

Chermside West, Queensland

Geebung, Queensland
Sinnamon Park, Queensland


Sunnybank, Queensland


40 Seaview Street, Brighton, QLD
Hatha, General, Flow, Power, Vinyasa, Restorative, Yin, Pregnancy, Mum & Baby Yoga, Meditation, Workshops, Retreats, Privates
Brighton, Queensland
Strathpine, Queensland


Mt Cotton Rd, Mt Cotton, QLD


32 Taylor Street, Eastern Heights, Queensland
Hatha Yoga in the tradition of Swami Sivananda


2532 Gold Coast Highway, Mermaid Beach, Queensland
Your Yoga Sanctuary


Byron Bay, NSW
A Senior Prana Vinyasa yoga teacher trainer, mentor, writer and creatrix of Devi Designs. Delamay is well known internationally for her embodied offerings that are fueled with inspiration and infectious enthusiasm. She is honored to assist Shiva Rea for the past decade and is passionate about sharing movement as medicine and yoga philosophy in sync with the natural cycles of existence.


72 Byron St, Bangalow, NSW
#yogalates #slowflow #vinyasa #yin #barre #pilates


160/162 Alcorn Street, Suffolk Park, New South Wales
Flo Fenton (regular contributor to Australian Yoga Life magazine)offers the opportunity to experience a yoga life-style at its most authentic.


160/162 Alcorn Street, Suffolk Park, NSW
This course will provide you with all the skills, confidence and understanding to create a rewarding career in yoga teaching at a deeper level. Most importantly though, I will share with you knowledge tools and the experience of doing your life in a deeper, more connected, more satisfying way.”-Flo Fenton.
Hatha yoga is one of the oldest and most foundational forms of yoga in existence, and for millions of practitioners around the world, it remains the perfect entry point into a lifelong practice. The word "hatha" comes from the Sanskrit roots "ha," meaning sun, and "tha," meaning moon — a poetic reminder that this practice is built on the principle of balance: strength and flexibility, effort and ease, body and breath moving in harmony. Unhurried and deeply intentional, Hatha offers something increasingly rare in modern life — a genuine invitation to slow down, tune in, and reconnect with the physical self in a meaningful way.
The roots of Hatha yoga stretch back to medieval India, with the Hatha Yoga Pradipika, written by the sage Swatmarama in the 15th century, serving as one of its earliest and most revered texts. This classical manual outlined postures, breathwork, and purification practices designed to prepare the body and mind for deeper states of meditation. Over centuries, these teachings were carried forward by lineages of devoted teachers, and in the 20th century, pioneering figures like Tirumalai Krishnamacharya helped shape the modern understanding of Hatha as a systematic physical practice. Today, nearly every style of yoga practiced in the West — from Vinyasa to Iyengar — traces its roots back to Hatha's foundational principles. A typical Hatha class moves at a steady, accessible pace, guiding students through a series of standing, seated, and supine postures held long enough to cultivate both awareness and stability. Sessions almost always include focused breathwork, known as pranayama, and often close with a period of guided relaxation or meditation. The benefits are wide-ranging and well-documented: improved flexibility, greater core strength, reduced stress, better posture, and a calmer, more focused mind. Regular practice has also been linked to lower blood pressure, improved sleep quality, and a heightened sense of overall wellbeing.
Hatha is particularly well suited to beginners, older adults, and anyone returning to movement after injury or a period of inactivity, though seasoned practitioners continue to find depth and challenge within its classical framework. Its emphasis on alignment, breath, and present-moment awareness makes it a grounding antidote to faster-paced styles, and its accessibility means that people of virtually every age and fitness level can step onto the mat with confidence. For anyone curious about yoga but unsure where to begin, Hatha is not just a starting point — it is a complete and luminous path in its own right, waiting to be explored.