Sadhana grew up immersed in the world of Bhakti Yoga , her father introduced her to meditation when she was young, planting a seed that would shape everything that followed.
For six years she moved through the corporate world, capable and successful, until something quiet but persistent finally said: this is not it. She listened. She left. And she never looked back.
What followed was not a course of study but a full immersion into life itself. She travelled alone, living for several years across different ashrams in India, exploring Bhakti Yoga, Karma Yoga, and Jnana Yoga. She studied deeply in Vedanta, dove into Tantra, and walked the path of Mantra Yoga after being initiated by an enlightened Master. She did not study these traditions from the outside. She lived inside them.
She began teaching in South India, then expanded into organising yoga retreats across India, in the mountains of the Himalayas, and settling her deepest roots in Bali, Indonesia. Her work grew to hold many dimensions: meditative Hatha Vinyasa, the bridge between ancient wisdom and modern science, women’s work, feminine embodiment, somatic practice, sound healing, and the practical craft of building a meaningful yoga business.
What she brings to the shala at Yoga New Vision is the full depth of that journey. Her classes move like meditations, breath-led, body-reverent, and deeply still. She also holds the invisible work of this training. The conversations that happen quietly after class. The student who needs to be met somewhere the curriculum cannot reach. The moment that calls for a different kind of presence. Sadhana notices. She always does.
When she walks into the room, something settles. You will feel it from the very first session.