Since April 2016, when she discovered the then-brand new studio, the investment bank employee has abandoned yoga and embraced meditation.
"I have been meditating pretty regularly -- probably five times a week, 30-minute sessions," says Lyons, sipping a cup of tea on the studio's sofa.
"I just need a moment to chill out. This city -- you are always running place to place and there are not a lot of quiet spaces," she explains.
Practiced by millions around the world, meditation promotes mental wellbeing through concentration, breathing techniques and self-awareness.
For a long time, those singing its praises were intellectuals, celebrities or people dedicated to spirituality.
Its popularity in the West is owed in part to the Beatles, who promoted the practice on their return from India in the late 1960s.
But these days, meditation can be found in all areas of life -- from hospitals exploring its benefits for patients with serious illnesses, to schools who recommend it for children and television shows.
As a result, demand is spreading across American cities -- perhaps a natural continuation of the yoga craze, which firmly embedded the search for nirvana in the health and wellbeing industry.
Lodro Rinzler, Mndfl's 34-year-old "chief spiritual officer," opened his first studio in Greenwich Village at the end of 2015, and now owns two others in Manhattan and Brooklyn. Elsewhere in the US, studios can be found in Los Angeles, Miami, Washington and Boston.
"The people who come here are really a cross section of all New Yorkers," he explains.
"If the common denominator is, 'I am really stressed out, I need to know how to deal with my mind' -- that's basically everyone."
Rinzler refuses to talk money, revealing only that classes are often full -- and the 75 numbered pads in his studios have been reserved online 70,000 times in just 18 months.
The reason for success? A model offering a well-rounded introduction to this ancient practice for a reasonable price.
With classes priced at just USD 10 for half an hour, and options for unlimited subscriptions, new studios in New York or Los Angeles hope to capture a wider audience.
Their model is similar to gyms, but with "zen" in abundance -- including dimmed lights, plant walls, and unlimited organic tea.
Companies are also reaping meditation's benefits. More and more organizations in Silicon Valley and other sectors are introducing employees to the practice, convinced of the long- term benefits for the workforce.
Starting from 150 students in the first year, she now has over 7,000 -- and hopes to reach tens of thousands more with online courses, including in medium-sized cities such as Cleveland, Ohio or Tallahassee, Florida.
"The most common way that I find myself teaching at companies is I teach the CEOs to meditate, and they start to benefit and they bring me on to do a talk with the company," Fletcher, CEO of Ziva Meditation, says.
Employees take part on a voluntary basis, mostly "for some selfish reasons," the 38-year-old explains.
But Fletcher insists she has no issue with people starting out of self-interest.
"If you actually practice you will start enjoying your life more, your brain will function better, your body will feel better, you get sick less often," she says.
"Those altruistic things will happen as a result of the practice anyway."
Another aspect of the industry gaining traction is meditation apps.
One of the most popular, Headspace, had already been downloaded more than 11 million times in the spring -- and boasts over 400,000 paying users.
"I am sure they are going to be exactly like yoga studios, you are going to find them on every block..." Rinzler predicts.
"If you look at it as a business, there is competition," Fletcher reflects, adding, "if you see it as a mission, there are colleagues.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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