Holistic stores near me provide an invaluable resource for herbs, supplements, and holistic products. In addition to offering classes and consultations, these stores also stock items such as herbal capsules, tea blends, seasonings and resins – not to mention sage incense and mala beads! New York Open Center Bookstore and Namaste offer extensive collections of spiritual books available in New York City.

Sacred Vibes Apothecary

Sacred Vibes Apothecary in Brooklyn offers high-quality herbs, healing tinctures and herbal teas from trusted suppliers at reasonable prices. Furthermore, their selection of unique body and mind spirit tools provides for complete body wellness. Located near Ditmas Park and featuring herbal consultation services as well as educational nature walks, immersive herbology workshops and an apprentice program, their cozy store also provides herbal consulting.

At Sacred Vibes Apothecary in Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, Karen Rose, 39, continues the family tradition of ancestral herbalism with an upstart enterprise called Sacred Vibes Apothecary. Together with employee Jessica Hammel they craft herbal tinctures, syrups, tonics and capsules under names such as “Drop It Like It’s Hot” (a weight loss blend) and “Bless You Again” (an allergy remedy) as well as spices teas and resins – as well as spices teas & resins sold here too.

Namaste

Namaste Holistic Bookshop provides a diverse selection of spiritual books spanning Eastern and Western philosophy, yoga/Ayurveda, meditation, divination, Wicca and tarot for sale. Additionally it boasts music by Eastern musicians including Krishna Das, Snatum Kaur Deva Premal Jai Uttal. Furthermore it houses an upstairs healing center which hosts classes, workshops and events as well as energy healing sessions using light strokes to rebalance physical, mental and emotional aspects of your body.

New York Open Center Bookstore

As its name implies, this spiritual bookstore provides New Yorkers of all creeds a one-stop shop for spiritual development and holistic health literature (including Eastern/Western religions, Buddhist teachings, Yoga/Meditation techniques, Astrology/Tarot cards/Alternative medicine/Feng Shui practices etc). This small kiosk provides an eclectic selection of books on these subjects.

Greenwich Village bookstore This classic bookstore is an iconic staple. Its iconic neon pink sign invites NYU students, local residents and travelers alike into its welcoming interior where art books, spiritual tomes and fiction await discovery. Alongside offering subscription services and rentals for personal libraries – as well as unique offerings such as Books by the Foot for creating one-of-a-kind book collections for home or commercial spaces – Books by the Foot also hosts yoga and healing classes that add something extra.

Quest Books

Namaste offers one of the city’s largest spiritual and holistic book collections. Additionally, they stock crystals, jewelry and altar worthy statues and carvings to choose from; making this store ideal for getting lost for hours on end.

The Quest Bookshop in Midtown Manhattan is an idyllic retreat, reminiscent of 1970s spiritual counterculture and dating back to Helena Blavatsky – often called the Godmother of New Age movements – of 19th-century Russian occultist and spiritual author Helena Blavatsky (known as Godmother of New Age Movements). Offering oils, candles, incense and mala beads as well as being part of New York Open Center’s bookstore for studying wisdom across world religions with her portrait hung prominently above.

Botanicas

Latino communities commonly frequent herbal shops known as botanicas that combine folk medical traditions with centuries of religious belief systems. These shops can be found throughout urban areas due to domestic migration patterns. Abbey Santiago, an energy healer from Taino Dominican descent who frequents botanicas nationwide, shares her finds through YouTube and TikTok channels.

Botanicas remove many of the typical obstacles to health-care access such as language, transportation, legal status and insurance issues by offering spiritual and healing consultations along with herbal remedies in an environment which fosters community spirit.

Consumer Reports recently visited a Brooklyn botanica and spoke with several women inside about how they use medicinal plants and religious items for physical and spiritual healing, packaging methods, labels and information on adverse drug reactions.