yogamates

love yoga? pay that feeling forward!

sponsor a mat....be a yogamate

By sponsoring a mat through BNHF, you will support someone who may not be able to access yoga to enjoy its life-changing benefits.

"It leaves me feeling bendier, more relaxed and feeling optimistic and hopeful. Even when I don’t have the energy to do many of the postures it’s helpful to enjoy the sense of connection with the class."

how does it work?

Here at BNHF, we provide free yoga classes for people facing health inequalities who need them most!  We support people facing homelessness, chronic pain and trauma. Scroll down to read stories of how our work has changed lives.

By becoming a yogamate, your donation will sponsor a mat for someone facing financial or social barriers to wellbeing.

Your support will help us run inclusive classes across Brighton — from trauma-informed yoga sessions to classes for people experiencing homelessness and people in chronic pain.

Be part of it! Sponsor a mat. Change a life. Sign up to a monthly donation before the end of December and receive:

  • a set of Yoga for All postcards, designed exclusively for BNHF.
  • heavily discounted tickets on our events (such as the Brighton Yoga Festival and Yoga Supper Clubs)
  • regular updates

buy a gift - change a life

Stuck for a gift idea for the yogi in your life? Treat them to a yogamate sponsorship. They will receive all of the benefits above plus a personalised gift certificate.

your donations

£5 donation pays for one class for one person 

£10 pays for two classes for one person

£30 donation pays for a six class block for one person

A monthly subscription of £2, £5 or £10 a month will allow you to give ongoing support to our programmes. 

Become a Yoga Matesign up today

yogamate champions

Click on each champion to read more

We are so grateful for the support of your yogamate champions. Some of the most respected voices in yoga have joined forces to support our work,helping us spread the word and raise much needed funds for our work. Read their testimonies below…

Jivana Heyman

Louise Windsor

Petra Coveney

Jim Tarran

Eunice Laurel

Donna Noble

Pete Blackaby

Paul Fox

Rebecca Sebastian

Norman Blair

Charlotte Watts

Anna Sugarman

Jivana Heyman

“The idea of making yoga accessible has gained ground over the past few years. But the biggest obstacle to accessibility is financial inequity, and that is still not being addressed by the greater yoga community. In this light, sharing free and low cost yoga classes is the work that we need to embrace if we truly want to make yoga accessible to all.”

Louise Windsor

“I support the Yoga Mate campaign because through teaching for some of the outreach group classes I have experienced first hand how people who wouldn’t usually come to a studio really benefit from these yoga classes. Yoga is for everyone and should not be limited to only the small percentage of people that can afford it.”

Petra Coveney

“I’m supporting Yogamates and the BNHF because I believe in the health and wellbeing benefits of mindful movement, breathwork and meditation. But not everyone can afford the cost of classes. BNHF is helping me give back to the community by providing free yoga to people facing health inequalities, homelessness, chronic pain and trauma. These classes can be life-changing work. Please support,  donate and be a Yogamate.”

Jim Tarran

“YogaMate is another wonderful outreach from the lovely bunch that have bought us the Brighton Yoga Festival and the Brighton Yoga Foundation. Community is referred to as kula in sanskrit which means among other things “family”. I always tell my students that yoga philosophy 101 is that “Everything is Everything” – in other words interdependent. Yoga starts with ethics (śīla) because our actions reflect our worldview and our worldview conditions our actions. The benefit of being in the body, breath and heart and reflecting on deeper yogic meanings like this is life-changing and everyone deserves”

Eunice Laurel

The Yogamate initiative is a beautiful example of the yogic concept of sevā (selfless service) in action. By reducing the barriers to access, Yogamate brings the healing benefits of yoga to the very communities where it’s needed most. Access to wellbeing practices belong to everyone. I’m so pleased to see this initiative unfold in Brighton and I hope that everyone gets behind it.

Donna Noble

I’m supporting the yogamates campaign because yoga helped me heal and reconnect with myself, and I believe everyBODY deserves that same opportunity. It has been my passion to make yoga more accessible, diverse and inclusive so everyone can experience its amazing benefits.

Too many people have felt excluded from yoga because of their body, ethnicity, ability, background, age and these outreach programmes help change that. They bring yoga into communities that need rest, support, and connection the most. I’m honoured to support a campaign that reflects my mission.

Pete Blackaby

Building a yoga community that is accessible and supportive helping people with chronic pain, trauma or simply feeling exhausted by life is a really wonderful thing and why I’m very happy to be a yogamate. It might change your life!

Paul Fox

I am delighted to support the fantastic yogamates initiative by the Brighton Natural Health Foundation. Yoga is a transformational practice, but for too many on lower incomes it remains out of reach. yogamates provides a simple and effective way of reducing the inequality of access to yoga through sponsoring a mat for those dealing with homelessness, chronic pain, or trauma. I urge everyone who can to support the yogamates programme.

Rebecca Sebastian

yogamates is the kind of program I find so inspiring to see in the yoga space.  Good teachers doing good work and giving back to the community.  All humans deserve access to skillfully taught yoga classes, and I am incredibly thrilled to support yogamates

Norman Blair

For me, yoga is less about poses – more about practices that are oriented towards enhancing sensitivity, cultivating inner resilience and encouraging connection. Practices that emphasise agency (rather than postural ambitions). Personally, I have been actively involved in social justice campaigns since the early 1980s. I believe that it is crucial that we connect inward work with outward work – personal transformation in the service of societal transformation. As practitioners, we know that we have the capacity for positive change. We can be catalysts for change: we can look up, raise our aspirations, be less reactive and more creative.

Charlotte Watts

I am so happy to support this truly impactful work  – the true essence of yoga can so deeply resource individuals and taking this into communities can have such a profound effect on people’s lives.

Anna Sugarman

Yoga is for every body – a sacred dance of breath, biology, and being, where muscle and mystery intertwine and unwind. Each unique physique becomes a poem of physics and faith as this practice awakens the chemistry of calm and the quiet magic of knowing that you are already whole, holy, here, becoming who you were always going to be, connected to all who have and will ever walk this path too

david's story

David, a former PE teacher, met Brighton Yoga Foundation* teacher Louise Windsor whilst he was living at the Turning Tides homeless charity in Worthing.  

As well as being a career PE teacher, I have played many competitive sports in my life… In my earlier life, I never thought I would ever do yoga.  But then again, I never thought I would become an alcohol addict, either. 

Whilst at Turning Tides, I was allowed to try free yoga classes organised by BYF.   There I met with Louise, who led the classes so well that I began to see that yoga is not simply a way of exercising.  I began to feel drawn into the practices in a new way.  The yoga classes awoke something in me.  What that something was, I am still to this day finding out.

Finding yoga has been a life-changing event… I feel fitter than I have felt for many years now, but it’s a fitness of a different kind.  I’ve found that the holistic nature of yoga has gone way beyond my understanding of ‘being fit’.  For example, I am constantly finding out what physical limitations I have (like my wobbly balances) and embracing them.  Now I can accept my limitations and even laugh at them, to laugh with them, you might say, as they are part of who I am.

Yoga is now part of my everyday life.  After the classes with Louise, I joined the excellent Hotpod Yoga in Worthing.

My recovery journey continues.  It is not a walk in the park, and there is no finish line.  I will always be an addict.  But I have yoga and the yoga community.  The yoga community I now feel part of has accepted me for who I am today and who I hope to be tomorrow.  This new, amazingly wonderful path began in my classes with Louise. 

*Brighton Yoga Foundation merged with the Brighton Natural Health Foundation in 2024

pennie's story

I discovered this class through Fibro Flyers during lockdown and haven’t missed a week since. I’d never tried yoga before, and I was worried it might be too much—but it’s gentle, focused on small movements that make a big difference. I don’t have to leave the house, which helps conserve my energy, and because it’s live, it gives me the motivation to show up and feel part of something.

In winter, when my health really dips, yoga gives me more than just movement—it lifts my mood and helps with my mental health. I need fewer osteopath visits now, and it’s one of the few things that truly helps with stiffness and fatigue.

What’s surprised me most is the sense of inclusion. It’s the one time each week I feel part of something regular and supportive. That feeling of community, even online, really matters—especially when living with a long-term condition like fibromyalgia.

I’m so glad I listened when someone encouraged me to try it. If you’re unsure, just do one class. You might find, like I did, that it becomes something you really look forward to each week.”

jo's story

I’ve been doing yoga with Sarah for about seven years, following her through four different spaces. I first found out about the (BNHF) project when I was homeless and living in emergency accommodation. I think it was my St Mungo’s support worker who told me about it.

Back then, yoga was everything—it was the only thing that resembled a normal life. I was in a really difficult place, and going to a class made me feel like a person again. I even went to a choir. When you’re in that kind of housing, everything is destabilising. Yoga helped me stay grounded. Sometimes I went every day, just to keep sane.

I’ve been diagnosed with Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder and ADHD, so finding emotional balance is essential. Now I also have psoriatic arthritis, which affects my joints. Yoga helps me manage the pain, stay mobile, and reduce stress—because stress makes everything worse.

Even now, with a flat of my own, yoga is still my calm. It softens me, resets me, and gives me strength. I’ve been practising for 16 years. I’m on benefits, so being able to access community yoga means everything. I didn’t just discover yoga—it’s what’s got me through.