Marijuasana was featured by The List Show TV.
Read MoreYoga classes are in high demand right now, combine them with cannabis and you might have a trending business idea. Marijuana is meant to relax the body and mind, which is a perfect state to be in when practising yoga.
Read MoreEnjoy yoga? There's a way to get even more out of it: Combine your yoga practice with cannabis. Stacey Mulvey, founder of Marijuasana says cannabis can help increase circulation, decrease inflammation, reduce muscle spasms, and get you in the right frame of mind for a great stretch. It's a great way to optimize your next yoga session.
Listen and learn! Namaste!
Read MoreAs cannabis acceptance grows, people are looking for ways to incorporate it into other parts of their lives. That includes exercise like yoga.
There are a lot of people who say merging marijuana and yoga isn’t really that much of a stretch.
Read MoreThe Fox 5 Vegas feature got picked up by CNN!
Read MoreMarijuasana was featured by Fox 5 Vegas. This class, and the people who attended really helped to make Las Vegas feel like home.
Read MoreI’m very excited to release this episode today, and I know you’re going to dig it as much as I do. I learned so much from my chat with Stacey, and I loved getting to know her and hearing more about her fascinating story. She is a really brave, cool, genuine, and empowered woman, and talking with her was so effortless.
Read More“Cannabis literally attunes and synthesizes movement with our emotional and mental state, offering us a chance to explore alternative ways of expressing how we move our body, and how we feel about it as we move. “
Read MoreStacey’s service expands, profoundly, on what a lot of us have experienced at home—doing yoga to compliment a good sesh. However, Marijuasana takes us out of the bedroom and into a communal environment with classes that focus on mindful movement incorporating cannabis consumption and encouraging a deeper connection with the self.
Read MorePracticing yoga under the influence can help advance students’ abilities, Mulvey says. She believes the drug can alter the connection between mind and body just enough to break damaging or limiting patterns of movement.
Read MoreFive questions is all that is asked- not your typical interview, nor the type of writing that is commonly in the know. As the wind swirls and groans just beyond the windows, the enlightenment of sharing thoughts becomes more tangible and pronounced. The practice that Stacey shares with cannabis is Yoga, and through her unique and healing mantra regarding the language of cannabis, her life form takes on new meaning.
Read MoreThe Rolling Stone Guide to Legal Pot: Massachusetts
Stacey Mulvey, who runs Marijuasana – a cannabis-friendly yoga practice based in Las Vegas – recently brought her workshop to Boston.
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