Cost:
One off payment – €15 waged or €12 unwaged
Yoga Card (10 Classes) – €100
All of our online classes are offered on a donation basis. If you’d like to join any of these yoga classes via Zoom contact the DBC.
Cost:
One off payment – €15 waged or €12 unwaged
Yoga Card (10 Classes) – €100
All of our online classes are offered on a donation basis. If you’d like to join any of these yoga classes via Zoom contact the DBC.
Beginner’s Level:
Monday: 1 – 2pm (In-Person Only)
Tuesday: 5.30 – 6.45pm (In-Person Only)
General Level:
Tuesday: 1 – 2pm
Wednesday: 1 – 2pm
Thursday: 6 – 7.15pm (Hatha Flow with Johanna – In-Person Only)
Friday: 1 – 2pm
Saturday: 10 – 11.30am
Intermediate Level:
Wednesday: 5.30 – 7pm
(The intermediate class is for those who have been practicing shoulder stand & head stand for at least a year.)
Everyone is welcome to come to our events in the DBC. However, in line with current government guidelines, we ask that you do not come to the DBC in person if you have any symptoms of Covid, or have received a positive result from any covid test.
If either of these apply, we ask that you wait until the end of recommended self-isolation period before returning to the Centre. Otherwise, we hope to see you soon in the DBC!
You can keep up to date with our yoga events by signing up to our Yoga Mailing list. Signing up will mean you will occasionally (every couple of months) receive an email detailing any events coming up regarding yoga.
Yoga gives energy, which enables us to lead life fully and with enjoyment, and works on lots of different levels of our being.
Physically it strengthens the body by developing greater flexibility and balance. It can give relief from numerous common ailments and allows stress to loosen its grip on us.
Psychologically, yoga sharpens the intellect, aids concentration and steadies the emotions. And beyond that, yoga brings awareness and the ability to be still, which gives rise to inner peace.
Why not try it? Our classes cater for all levels of age and experience. Our custom built meditation and yoga room is a beautiful space in which to do yoga.
Our central location in Dublin 1 is right beside Connolly Station and Busaras, and very near O’Connell Street, and so very easy to get to.
For more information see our pages about:
Iyengar classes lead by Pavara
Hatha Flow classes lead by Johanna Varghese
At the moment all of our online classes are on a donation basis.
Over the past few months the Dublin Buddhist Centre has made a few thought for the day videos.
Here’s a selection from our yoga teacher Pavara.
We also run Yoga and Meditation Days, teaching both the Mindfulness of Breathing and the Development of Loving-Kindness meditation practices, as well as having two sessions of yoga. These are a great opportunity to see how meditation and yoga can go hand-in-hand with each other.
Twice a year, we run Yoga and Meditation Retreats, which run Friday to Sunday in a beautiful setting of Mucklagh House in Co. Wicklow.
You will just need to bring yourself and some suitable clothing for yoga to the class. Mats, blocks and all other yoga equipment are provided. Suitable clothing is clothing which is not tight and will not impede your movement. A good example is tracksuit bottoms and a loose t-shirt.
There are also facilities to change your clothes in the centre, especially if you are just coming from work.
People usually turn up a few minutes before the class to change and relax in the main yoga room and quietly prepare for doing the class.
The yoga teacher will then start the class, usually with some meditative body awareness postures, and then move into a progressive sequence of postures aimed at deepening flexibility, awareness and strength. These postures include standing postures, forward bends, back bends, inverted postures, and twists.
The class then ends with a period of relaxation, called shavasana.
Do not eat a large amount of food directly before the class. It is best to arrive in good time so that you won’t be hurried or rushed, and can relax more deeply once the class begins.
If you’re stiff and unflexible, all the more reason to do yoga! We have many people who come to do yoga just for this reason, and they learn how to work with their body and, over time, become more flexible and supple. Even after one class people can notice the difference.
Our courses have a wide range of ages, from young adults up to retirees. Both men and women come to the classes, from all walks of life. All that’s needed is an interest in improving your wellbeing!
Yes, yoga can be of enormous benefit for back problems and other injuries. If you do have injuries, it is important to let the teacher know beforehand of your condition and to be extremely gentle and careful in the postures themselves, only going so far as you and the teacher feel is safe.
As well as helping bad backs and injuries, yoga can also help in cases of joint, circulatory, and respiratory problems.
You can still do yoga when you are pregnant, but not all yoga poses are suitable for you when you’re pregnant, and so you should go to a dedicated pregnancy yoga class. Unfortunately we are unable to provide yoga facilities during pregnancy.
Feel free to contact us about using the following form or by emailing us.
Meditation is a means of transforming the mind. It helps us change the way we relate to ourselves and the world around us.
Buddhist meditation techniques offer a way of encouraging and developing positive states of mind, such as calmness, clarity, emotional positivity and a deeper seeing of the true nature of things.
Mindfulness is one of the central practices in Buddhism. Put simply, when we are mindful, we are aware, we notice what is going on around us and inside us.