Pattern of Broken Promises — Not What Was Advertised
I enrolled in Haritha Ayurveda Academy based on what their website promised. Unfortunately, very little of it was delivered.
There was no clear curriculum or syllabus. Classes were often shortened, canceled, or improvised. Yoga and meditation were advertised but not initially provided — we had to repeatedly ask. When instructors canceled, substitutes were promised and did not appear.
The classroom environment was patronizing. Students were discouraged from asking questions and one was directly insulted.
More seriously, the behavior of a senior instructor toward female students was inappropriate and unsettling, including sexual hypotheticals during lectures and physical interactions that caused discomfort. Several women stopped attending sessions because they felt unsafe.
Management laughed off concerns instead of addressing them.
The accommodations were unfinished and uncomfortable, with limited hot water, no kitchen despite advertising one, and basic necessities only provided after repeated requests.
This was not one bad day — it was a consistent pattern. I would strongly encourage prospective students to look elsewhere.






