Key Averages
Divya | NYC Yoga Teacher & Trainer
Instagram Profile
Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer’s Instagram is projected to grow by - / day
Projection based on recent performance trends.Followers Graph

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Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer — Instagram Follower Projections
Projected growth from past data. Actuals may vary with trends or algorithm shifts.
Time Until | Date | Followers | Posts | Growth |
---|---|---|---|---|
Live | 143,696 | 843 | — | |
Not enough data. |

Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer has an Instagram engagement rate of 2.96%
Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer Historical Stats
Latest 15 entries. Daily follower gains and drops.

Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer can charge up to $300 USD per Instagram post.
Typical range: $60 – $300 USDDivya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer’s Influence Rate
Export CSVDivya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer shows an influence rate of 2.96%, suggesting a reach of ~4.2K per post.
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Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer (@divyabala) — 144K FollowersEngagement: 2.96% · Avg. Likes: 4.2K · Avg. Comments: 87
FAQ – Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer Instagram Stats
Common questions about Divya NYC Yoga Teacher Trainer’s Instagram analytics.
- Why is French expected in ballet, but Sanskrit in yoga makes people uncomfortable? 🤔 Respecting French in ballet but rejecting Sanskrit in yoga is cultural bias, plain and simple. You’d never walk into a ballet class and expect the teacher to say “squat” instead of plié or “spin” instead of pirouette. But in yoga? Suddenly Vrikshasana or Virabhadrasana is “too much” and “intimidating.” Honestly, Sanskrit isn’t used to sound fancy or exclusive. It’s used to preserve the integrity of yoga, to pass down its philosophy, and to invite depth into the practice. When you seek out teachers who use Sanskrit, you’re choosing presence, intention, and lineage over convenience. Stop diluting yoga to fit comfort zones and start respecting it the way we respect ballet — with reverence for its roots. That’s all! 🫶🏾✌🏾
- Yoga in India just hits different. Don’t get me wrong—yoga is yoga anywhere in the world. But over the past month I experienced yoga in a way I haven’t before while traveling through India. I grew up practicing yoga before I even knew what it was. It was just woven into the fabric of my culture and daily rituals — and what a blessing that was. But every time I go back to India I’m reminded of how differently community operates there. It’s a living breathing thing that ebbs and flows in perfect harmony. It’s not without conflict and problems of its own but there is a special way about this land. The natural balancing act that occurs within the walls of my ancestral home. The sharing, caring, devotion, and disciplines that are built into our way of living. This type of love and unity is something I’ll always be in awe of and forever grateful for. Thank you India, and happy Independence Day - may you be free forever. 🇮🇳🫶🏾 . . . #indianindependenceday #yogainindia #indianyogateacher #tamilnadu #chennai #yoga #India
- Before it was the “Marie Kondo” method, it was Yoga. Aparigraha is one of the Yamas, or ethical disciplines, in yoga philosophy. It gives us guidelines on how to release the tendency to attach to people, places, ideas and things. The concept of renouncing external attachments and possessions in favor of internal contentment is present in nearly every spiritual path out there. I’ve personally experienced what it feels like to let myself be weighed down and stagnated by holding onto physical clutter and emotional anchors. We do it because it gives us a false sense of security and grounding—but at the very real cost of living a small, contained existence. Hoarding inhibits our ability to experience the true, limitless self. One capable of boundless joy and compassion. There are so many ways to practice Aparigraha both on and off the yoga mat, including some that I’ve described here. How do you practice non-attachment?