Inside the Anamaya Resort Daily Schedule

Inside the Anamaya Resort Daily Schedule
The first morning always startles you awake. Not an alarm—howler monkeys in the canopy, their prehistoric roar rolling across the clifftop just as dawn breaks over the Pacific. By 6:00 AM, you're walking barefoot across warm teak planks toward the upper shala, mat under arm, still rubbing sleep from your eyes. Other retreatants drift in quietly, and you settle onto bolsters for the 6:30 sit. Twenty minutes of guided mindfulness meditation, waves audible 200 feet below, the jungle canopy turning gold in the early light.
By 7:00 AM, you're moving. The morning asana session runs until 8:30—usually a flowing vinyasa practice designed to wake up the body without overwhelming it. Your teacher (often one of the visiting facilitators leading this week's program) cues breath and movement while white-faced capuchins occasionally swing through the trees visible beyond the shala's open walls. On day one, you're still finding your edges. By day four, you're flowing without thinking, your breath synced to the sequence, your body remembering what it came here to learn.
Breakfast is served from 9:00 to 10:00 AM on the main terrace, where the view competes with the food for attention. Long tables are laid with pitchers of fresh juice—papaya, pineapple, watermelon—and platters of tropical fruit cut that morning. There's always a cooked option: scrambled eggs with herbs from the garden, sweet potato hash, or banana pancakes with coconut. The kitchen leans plant-forward, drawing on naturopathic principles (a nod to co-founder Joseph Mikrut's background), but flexible enough to accommodate the proteins some bodies need. Coffee drinkers cluster near the espresso machine. Most people eat slowly, talking in low voices or journaling at corner tables.
Late Morning: Workshops and Deep Dives
At 10:30 or 11:00 AM, depending on the program, the real work begins. This is when workshops, breakout sessions, or specialized practices fill the schedule. A biohacking-focused retreat might offer cold-water immersion protocols and heart-rate variability training. A holistic wellness week could feature naturopathic consultations or sound healing circles in the lower shala. Iyengar-influenced programs often use this window for detailed alignment work with props—blocks, straps, and chairs spread across the floor as teachers make micro-adjustments to poses held for minutes at a time.
These sessions run 90 minutes to two hours, and by day four, the cumulative effect is palpable. You're not just learning techniques; you're integrating them. The breathwork that felt mechanical on day one now drops you into altered states within three rounds.
Midday: Nourishment and the Long Pause
Lunch is served at 1:00 PM, and it's the heartiest meal of the day. Expect big salads with house-made dressings, coconut rice and beans, grilled fish or tempeh, roasted vegetables, and always something unexpected—a chilled cucumber soup, perhaps, or a mango-avocado ceviche. The kitchen telegraphs its Costa Rican location without pretending to be anything but international wellness cuisine.
What follows is sacred: three to four hours of unscheduled time. This is when the resort's clifftop setting earns its reputation. Some people nap in their bungalows, ceiling fans turning lazy circles overhead. Others walk the steep trail down to Montezuma beach, a 20-minute descent through jungle. Many book optional sessions—a 90-minute massage in the spa, a private consultation, a guided forest walk focused on medicinal plants.
Evening: The Day Settles
By 5:00 or 5:30 PM, people drift back to the shalas. Evening sessions vary widely by program: restorative yoga with bolsters and blankets as the sun sets, yin practices held in the cooling air, or group integration circles where the day's themes get processed aloud. Some retreats schedule nothing at all, trusting participants to find their own closing rhythm.
Dinner appears at 7:00 PM—lighter than lunch, often featuring soups, grilled vegetables, and grain bowls. By 8:30, the resort grows quiet. A few night owls gather for tea on the terrace, counting stars in the impossible darkness. Most people are in bed by 9:30, bodies tired in the best way, minds finally still.
On day one, you collapse into sleep, overwhelmed. By day four, you lie awake a few extra minutes, listening to the jungle, realizing how much you've changed in less than a week.



