5-Day Hridaya Easter Silent Retreat
The Path of Love and Surrender to the Divine
Upcoming Dates:
Offered in English in France and Online
Go Deeper on the Path of Love and Surrender through the Teachings of Jesus and Other Masters
Easter is a time of renewal and a celebration of Eternity. This Easter, senior Hridaya teacher Antoaneta invites you to celebrate this precious and special time by diving into the depths of your own heart through the teachings and life of Jesus, seen through the light of Advaita Vedanta (non-duality) and Bhakti Yoga.
This 5-day Easter silent meditation retreat will open you to the path of compassion, which was so majestically displayed by the great avatar and bodhisattva Jesus Christ. We’ll navigate the realm of the Heart through prayer, contemplation on the teachings and life of Jesus and other masters, Hatha Yoga, and silent meditation.
We’ll turn our attention to kindness and love, the most powerful force in the Universe, and look for the Light that resides in our hearts and open ourselves to the highest phenomenon that a human being can experience, compassion.
May this retreat be for the benefit of all sentient beings!
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Content
- Bhakti Yoga—The path of devotion
- The Heart Center according to the teachings of Ramana Maharshi
- Prayer and the Prayer of the Heart
- Jnana and Bhakti Yoga in Jesus’s teachings
- An explanation of the Beatitudes
- A contemplation on the life of Jesus as a Bodhisattva
- The profound meaning of Jesus’ resurrection
- Loving-kindness and compassion
“If I, as an Oriental, have to worship Jesus of Nazareth, there is only one way, that is, to worship him as God and nothing else.”
Content
Each Day of the Retreat Includes:
- Self-Inquiry meditation to connect with the inner Light
- Hridaya Hatha Yoga
- Contemplations on the teachings and life of Jesus and other great masters
- Practices from Bhakti Yoga and Jnana Yoga
- Talks on inspiring themes, including non-duality, devotion, compassion, kindness, and love
- Recommendations for living from the Heart
- A Q&A session (with written questions)
This retreat is offered on-site in Longeval as well as online, so you can join us from the comfort of home.
Schedule
All sessions take place in the Central European Summer Time zone (GMT+2).






Pricing and Practical Information
Please Note:
- This retreat is open to everyone. Whether you are a beginner or an advanced practitioner, we invite you to join us. We encourage you to read the Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat Guidelines to determine if you feel ready and inspired to do a retreat.
- The dates listed include accommodation the night before the retreat. The retreat begins Wednesday morning and ends before lunch on Easter Sunday.
- Check-in is available from 14:00 on arrival day. Please plan to arrive in time to get settled into your accommodations before the Orientation Session at 17:00.
- This retreat is addressed to those in a stable emotional and psychological state. If you have any mental health conditions, please read our Mental Health Disclaimer before registering.
- Please read our Payment, Refund, and Amendment Guidelines before booking.
- As a non-profit, Hridaya keeps prices low to ensure accessibility. If the costs still exceed your budget, you are welcome to apply for the low-income discount.
- For more information about our center, including how to get to Longeval, please visit this page.
Additional Information for the At-Home Retreat:
- Date and time details: This online retreat starts at 7:00 CEST (GMT +2) on April 1. A live pre-retreat introduction and Q&A will take place on March 31 at 19:30.
- The online retreat is offered on a sliding scale. You will be able to choose the pricing level that best reflects your possibilities.
- The retreat will be streamed via Zoom. Although you’ll join remotely, please follow the retreat schedule according to your time zone (using the on-demand recordings as needed) and abide by the Retreat Guidelines. If issues arise during the retreat, you can contact the Retreat Coordinator for assistance. You can also send questions related to the practice to Antoaneta, who will answer them during the nightly Q&As.
- To accommodate different time zones, this retreat will also be available on-demand. Video recordings will become available one day after each retreat session and will be accessible for 72 hours after the live retreat ends.
A €10 fee will be charged if you are joining Hridaya France for the first time or if your annual membership has expired. This fee does apply if you are joining us online.
Tuition
€150 (on-site)
€100 (online)
Food & Accommodation
Food and accommodation costs are supplemental to the tuition fee. You may choose from available accommodation options or stay off-site. We request that all guests have at least one meal per day in our vegan dining room.
Dates and Registration
Retreat Dates:
Check-in:
Checkout:
Duration:
Starting Price:
Retreat Dates:
Orientation Session:
Duration:
Starting Price:
Have a question? Contact us or check out our FAQ.

Frequently Asked Questions
We do a silent meditation retreat especially when we feel an intense calling towards the depths of our being. Or, we do a retreat when we feel the need to stop our ordinary activities for a while in order to objectify the nature of our impulses and see the reasons behind our decisions and actions with more clarity and detachment.
In this way, we purify our subconscious mind and start to more clearly see what is false in our lives. We also get closer to the real meaning of existence.
Even though there may be difficult times during retreat, we have the feeling that we are going deeper down a path of truthfulness, clarity, love, and detachment from old patterns.
Often, this process may appear completely new to us. To follow its call, we feel the need for discipline and dedication.
In every Hridaya Meditation we are invited to let go of our ego. We have the feeling of entering a path on which we cannot move forward other than in sacred solitude. It is like we decide to quit our personal world of fears, worries, traumas, thoughts, impulses, reactions, etc., in order to explore a new dimension—a world of awareness, peace, joy, and freedom. Thus, we start an inner journey into our Real Nature, feeling that we step forward on a path that we may have never stepped on before.
During a silent meditation retreat, the tendency of looking outside for fulfillment shifts to exploring ourselves from within. This shift of awareness makes us discover the space of Stillness in which all thoughts arise and dissipate. It is what we name “the awareness of awareness itself.”
Awareness also brings more sensitivity to the mind, emotions, and body. In this openness, old, painful memories and patterns emerge, are embraced without judgment and with awareness and love, and, thus, are released. The abandonment of what we were identified with (stories, dramas, fears, etc.) brings the happiness of pure existence, the freedom of awareness. Meditation becomes an always-new, conscious surrender into the unlimited, unknown “land” of our inner universe, into the secret infinity that dwells in us.
This inner path can be compared with facing death. The letting go of attachments has the same significance as evoking death in any genuine initiating ritual. In initiations, death (which is a death of the ego) symbolizes the fundamental spiritual path that starts from the individual, limited consciousness and ends in the Consciousness of Oneness.
Most often, it can be a long process with different stages. But the fundamental and fascinating phase is the conscious step from personal to transpersonal, from limitation to absolute freedom, from manifestation to transcendence.
The program and the guidelines of the Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat are meant to create the proper conditions to experience the calming of the mind and the blossoming of the Heart—the inner organ of direct Spiritual Knowledge.
It gives us the taste of the essential “dimension” of our being—Stillness.
In a silent retreat, it is much easier to free ourselves from the countless distractions of daily life. The mind becomes calmer, and we rediscover the beauty of simplicity, of nature, of pure presence. The retreat offers us the space and time to stop and meet ourselves in a deeper way.
Silence and solitude open us to the Stillness that is our Real Nature. The genuine touch of Stillness brings regeneration, clarity, strength, rest, and trust.
Stillness exists beyond the layers of words, thoughts, and emotions. Stillness is the ocean in which all sounds and movements appear as waves. Sound and silence, movement and immobility are inseparable in the embrace of awareness and Stillness. Thoughts depend on the Stillness of pure awareness, exactly as waves depend on the ocean.
Through the power of time, everything returns to Stillness. Being settled in this center—Stillness—brings significance, vigor, and enthusiasm to any aspect of life. When we lose our connection with Stillness, we become inefficient and weak.
When agitation ceases in our being, we can know this directly, in an intimate and obvious way. Through Hridaya Meditation, the awareness of the difference between thinking and just Being emerges in a natural way.
If thoughts and activity are formative for the personality, Stillness is trans-formative in the sense that it reveals to us the uniqueness and beauty that it is, that we are.
“In silence, the lines of the mouth are like the closed wings of a butterfly. When the word starts moving, the wings open, and the butterfly flies away. […]
Silence reveals itself in a thousand inexpressible forms: in the quiet of dawn, in the noiseless aspiration of trees towards the sky, in the stealthy descent of night, in the silent changing of the seasons, in the falling moonlight, trickling down into the night like a rain of silence, but above all in the silence of the inward soul,—all these forms of silence are nameless: all the clearer and surer is the word that arises out of and in contrast to the nameless silence.”
–Max Picard
“It is in the sanctuary of nature’s silent places, with mindful attention, that the true liberation of the heart can be obtained.”
–Buddha
This retreat is designed for everyone, from those who have never tried meditation to advanced meditators.
The daily schedule starts gently, with meditation sessions broken into short segments, increasing to longer sessions by the end of the retreat. In addition to meditation sessions, each day’s schedule includes a morning Hatha Yoga class, lectures, and time for questions and answers (with written questions).
In meditation, there should be no effort or difficulty, because all that we have “to do” is to remain in the center of our being, and each time we observe that we are taken away by thoughts, sensations, emotions, etc. we simply come back, again and again and again, without reaction, frustration, or tension, but with serenity and patience.
The great Jnana Yogi Nisargadatta Maharaj speaks about the naturalness and simplicity of meditation, which is essentially a Self-awareness.
“Q: … there must be a way for all to tread—with no conditions attached.
M: There is such a way, open to all, on every level, in every walk of life. Everybody is aware of himself. The deepening and broadening of Self-awareness is the royal way. Call it mindfulness, or witnessing, or just attention — it is for all. None is unripe for it and none can fail.”
Our aspiration is to support you in a genuine journey meant to bring a profound understanding of the real nature of existence.
Ultimately, there should be no expectations, because what we really are cannot be reduced to some physical or mental effects. The spiritual journey is not like a mathematical equation in which, when doing the same operations, you always expect the same effects.
Nevertheless, what we are “doing” in a retreat is simply creating proper physical and psychological conditions in order to let the Divine Reality be revealed in our Heart.
It may be quite possible that you will experience some profound energetic or psychological effects during meditation. Do not cling to them. In the openness of your being, much more than that is happening.
There is an orientation session held the day prior to the start of the retreat, in which we go over all guidelines. Retreat participants must attend; registration is not possible after this session. For more information, please read the Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat Guidelines.
At Hridaya, we speak about the integration of daily life into spirituality, since a real spiritual practice should change the old, selfish paradigms associated with daily life. Thus, yoga and meditation are not just a means to be more efficient in our daily tasks while we maintain old patterns. Rather, they encourage us to create coherence between our spiritual intuitions, aspirations, and daily lives.
During our modules and retreats, we speak about this topic and offer practical advice. If inspired, we encourage you to participate in a 10-Day Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat followed by From Retreat to Daily Life, our integration course.
We do a silent meditation retreat especially when we feel an intense calling towards the depths of our being. Or, we do a retreat when we feel the need to stop our ordinary activities for a while in order to objectify the nature of our impulses and see the reasons behind our decisions and actions with more clarity and detachment.
In this way, we purify our subconscious mind and start to more clearly see what is false in our lives. We also get closer to the real meaning of existence.
Even though there may be difficult times during retreat, we have the feeling that we are going deeper down a path of truthfulness, clarity, love, and detachment from old patterns.
Often, this process may appear completely new to us. To follow its call, we feel the need for discipline and dedication.
In every Hridaya Meditation we are invited to let go of our ego. We have the feeling of entering a path on which we cannot move forward other than in sacred solitude. It is like we decide to quit our personal world of fears, worries, traumas, thoughts, impulses, reactions, etc., in order to explore a new dimension—a world of awareness, peace, joy, and freedom. Thus, we start an inner journey into our Real Nature, feeling that we step forward on a path that we may have never stepped on before.
During a silent meditation retreat, the tendency of looking outside for fulfillment shifts to exploring ourselves from within. This shift of awareness makes us discover the space of Stillness in which all thoughts arise and dissipate. It is what we name “the awareness of awareness itself.”
Awareness also brings more sensitivity to the mind, emotions, and body. In this openness, old, painful memories and patterns emerge, are embraced without judgment and with awareness and love, and, thus, are released. The abandonment of what we were identified with (stories, dramas, fears, etc.) brings the happiness of pure existence, the freedom of awareness. Meditation becomes an always-new, conscious surrender into the unlimited, unknown “land” of our inner universe, into the secret infinity that dwells in us.
This inner path can be compared with facing death. The letting go of attachments has the same significance as evoking death in any genuine initiating ritual. In initiations, death (which is a death of the ego) symbolizes the fundamental spiritual path that starts from the individual, limited consciousness and ends in the Consciousness of Oneness.
Most often, it can be a long process with different stages. But the fundamental and fascinating phase is the conscious step from personal to transpersonal, from limitation to absolute freedom, from manifestation to transcendence.
The program and the guidelines of the Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat are meant to create the proper conditions to experience the calming of the mind and the blossoming of the Heart—the inner organ of direct Spiritual Knowledge.
It gives us the taste of the essential “dimension” of our being—Stillness.
In a silent retreat, it is much easier to free ourselves from the countless distractions of daily life. The mind becomes calmer, and we rediscover the beauty of simplicity, of nature, of pure presence. The retreat offers us the space and time to stop and meet ourselves in a deeper way.
Silence and solitude open us to the Stillness that is our Real Nature. The genuine touch of Stillness brings regeneration, clarity, strength, rest, and trust.
Stillness exists beyond the layers of words, thoughts, and emotions. Stillness is the ocean in which all sounds and movements appear as waves. Sound and silence, movement and immobility are inseparable in the embrace of awareness and Stillness. Thoughts depend on the Stillness of pure awareness, exactly as waves depend on the ocean.
Through the power of time, everything returns to Stillness. Being settled in this center—Stillness—brings significance, vigor, and enthusiasm to any aspect of life. When we lose our connection with Stillness, we become inefficient and weak.
When agitation ceases in our being, we can know this directly, in an intimate and obvious way. Through Hridaya Meditation, the awareness of the difference between thinking and just Being emerges in a natural way.
If thoughts and activity are formative for the personality, Stillness is trans-formative in the sense that it reveals to us the uniqueness and beauty that it is, that we are.
“In silence, the lines of the mouth are like the closed wings of a butterfly. When the word starts moving, the wings open, and the butterfly flies away. […]
Silence reveals itself in a thousand inexpressible forms: in the quiet of dawn, in the noiseless aspiration of trees towards the sky, in the stealthy descent of night, in the silent changing of the seasons, in the falling moonlight, trickling down into the night like a rain of silence, but above all in the silence of the inward soul,—all these forms of silence are nameless: all the clearer and surer is the word that arises out of and in contrast to the nameless silence.”
–Max Picard
“It is in the sanctuary of nature’s silent places, with mindful attention, that the true liberation of the heart can be obtained.”
–Buddha
This retreat is designed for everyone, from those who have never tried meditation to advanced meditators.
The daily schedule starts gently, with meditation sessions broken into short segments, increasing to longer sessions by the end of the retreat. In addition to meditation sessions, each day’s schedule includes a morning Hatha Yoga class, lectures, and time for questions and answers (with written questions).
In meditation, there should be no effort or difficulty, because all that we have “to do” is to remain in the center of our being, and each time we observe that we are taken away by thoughts, sensations, emotions, etc. we simply come back, again and again and again, without reaction, frustration, or tension, but with serenity and patience.
The great Jnana Yogi Nisargadatta Maharaj speaks about the naturalness and simplicity of meditation, which is essentially a Self-awareness.
“Q: … there must be a way for all to tread—with no conditions attached.
M: There is such a way, open to all, on every level, in every walk of life. Everybody is aware of himself. The deepening and broadening of Self-awareness is the royal way. Call it mindfulness, or witnessing, or just attention — it is for all. None is unripe for it and none can fail.”
Our aspiration is to support you in a genuine journey meant to bring a profound understanding of the real nature of existence.
Ultimately, there should be no expectations, because what we really are cannot be reduced to some physical or mental effects. The spiritual journey is not like a mathematical equation in which, when doing the same operations, you always expect the same effects.
Nevertheless, what we are “doing” in a retreat is simply creating proper physical and psychological conditions in order to let the Divine Reality be revealed in our Heart.
It may be quite possible that you will experience some profound energetic or psychological effects during meditation. Do not cling to them. In the openness of your being, much more than that is happening.
There is an orientation session held the day prior to the start of the retreat, in which we go over all guidelines. Retreat participants must attend; registration is not possible after this session. For more information, please read the Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat Guidelines.
At Hridaya, we speak about the integration of daily life into spirituality, since a real spiritual practice should change the old, selfish paradigms associated with daily life. Thus, yoga and meditation are not just a means to be more efficient in our daily tasks while we maintain old patterns. Rather, they encourage us to create coherence between our spiritual intuitions, aspirations, and daily lives.
During our modules and retreats, we speak about this topic and offer practical advice. If inspired, we encourage you to participate in a 10-Day Hridaya Silent Meditation Retreat followed by From Retreat to Daily Life, our integration course.



