Yoga & meditation for everyone
The Seva Series is a 100% donation-based yoga offering rooted in the practice of seva — selfless service.

Yoga should be available to everyone, not just the people who can afford it.
Donation-based classes help open the door, so more kids and families can access these practices.

Kids today are dealing with more than we realize.
Busy schedules, constant stimulation, and very little space to slow down. Yoga gives them a way to come back to themselves and feel steady again.

Yoga helps kids learn how to work with what they’re feeling.
Instead of acting out or shutting down, they start to recognize emotions, breathe through them, and respond with a little more awareness.

Focus is something that can be practiced.
Through movement, breath, and simple moments of stillness, kids build attention, patience, and the ability to stay with something a little longer.
What is Seva?
SEVA is the practice of offering something without expecting anything in return. In yoga, it’s not separate from the practice, it’s how the practice extends out into your life.
The SEVA Series is a collection of donation-based classes held around Anaconda. You come to move, breathe, and be with your community, and at the same time, you’re supporting something bigger than yourself.
All proceeds go toward expanding Yoga for Kids programs. That means free offerings for kids and mothers, and scholarships for Yoga Club and Yoga Camp.
This is a way to make these tools more accessible, to create spaces where kids can feel steady in their bodies, and where moms have somewhere to land.
You show up for a class, and that ripple reaches further than just you.
Upcoming Seva Classes
Rooted in the traditions of Karma Yoga (the yoga of action) and Bhakti Yoga (devotion), Seva reminds us that care for our communities is an essential part of spiritual practice.

Why donation-based?
Yoga should be accessible, but that doesn’t happen on its own.
Donation-based classes are one way to bridge that gap. Instead of a fixed price, people give what they can, and that support goes directly toward opening up Yoga for Kids programs to families who might not otherwise have access.
It creates a different kind of exchange. Not just paying for a class, but contributing to something that benefits the whole community. You come to practice, and at the same time, you’re helping build something that extends beyond you.

