What drew you to Yoga?

This is a post by Danielle Simpson, a Yoga instructor currently based in Vancouver. She’s part of the Coostom family, having starred as the model in our own videos, and provided feedback and support throughout the project’s life.

I always say that I started yoga when I was about 3 or 4. My favourite babysitter was very into yoga in the early 80s, and I would watch her practice with fascination. Soon, she had me doing headstands and child’s pose and I loved it. However, I truly started a dedicated yoga practice after I tore my ACL in my last year of university. I had read that doing Bikram yoga helped to heal people’s knees, and a new studio had opened up in my university town. I started going, in an attempt to heal from surgery. I often sat in hero’s pose, with three blocks beneath me and some tears in my eyes, wondering if I would ever be able to fully bend my knee again. After university, I traveled the world for a year. While working in Zambia, my boss invited me to a yoga class, which turned out to a Power Yoga class, and from that moment on, I was hooked on yoga like never before. Now seven years later, I can’t imagine my life without yoga, plus I can fully bend my knee again and fully recline in hero’s pose!

As my practice developed, I started to become more curious about yoga, its philosophy, and history. Like many other people who choose to take a teacher training, I went into it wanting to deepen my practice. I started asking around about different trainings and chose a teacher training that only had a small number of students. As I’ve always said, 200 hour yoga teacher trainings should really be called ‘200 hours of personal development’ because that is what it truly is. Yes, I learned a lot about yoga, but more importantly, I learned so much about myself. It has no doubt made me a better instructor, but it has made me a better wife, daughter, friend, and person.

I started teaching soon after I finished my teacher training as I realized that I could now share my love of yoga with so many other people. I now adore teaching vigorous vinyasa classes and quiet, gentle yin yoga classes, and love watching my students expand and grow in their practices. Seeing students becoming aware of their bodies and how they can work with their breath is amazing to witness and it’s a blessing to get to a part of their journey.

My favourite place to practice yoga is my cottage. The sound of water, the fresh breeze, and the blue sky make it the most ideal place to practice. Somewhere in my future, there will be a yoga retreat held at my cottage so I can share my two loves, yoga and my cottage. I hope you’ll come join me there.

To see Danielle’s work with Coostom: create a yoga session now.

Waking Up With Yoga – Transforming Your Morning

It’s 6am and your alarm has just gone off. Groggy and exhausted, you reach over and hit the snooze button. You fall back asleep for ten or fifteen minutes only to be awakened once more by the insistent beeping of the alarm. You reach over and hit the snooze button again. Eventually you reach the point where you absolutely must get out of bed. You drag yourself into the shower, hurry to get dressed for work and run out the door, perhaps stopping in the kitchen on your way out of the house to grab breakfast or your morning coffee. You use your commute time to either listen to the radio or check your emails/Facebook/Twitter on your smartphone and then you’re at the office and your entire morning is a blur.

But what if it didn’t have to be this way?

What if you begin the day with a yoga practice?

I know what you’re thinking: A morning yoga practice? I don’t have time to get to a class! Actually, you don’t have to. Ten minutes is all it takes to transform your morning from I-wish-I-was-still-in-bed to I’m-ready-for-the-day.

For starters, let’s rewind to the night before. Before going to bed, set a conscious intention to get out of bed when your alarm first goes off – this means no rolling over, and no groaning. In the morning, begin slowly:

  • Turn the alarm off and take a few deep breaths.
  • Rub your palms together to generate some heat and cup your hands over your eyes. Open your eyes slowly, adjusting to the morning light.
  • Stretch; bring your arms overhead, point your toes and yawn.
  • Hug your knees to your chest and rock gently side to side before rolling over and getting out of bed.

You don’t need to have a dedicated room for your yoga practice. In fact, you can keep your mat right beside your bed and roll it out every morning, to make it even easier to begin your practice. And your practice doesn’t have to be anything formal and structured – you can simply take a few minutes to stretch and do whatever feels right in the moment.

  • Inhale, sweep the arms overhead, and exhale to come into a forward fold.
  • Do this slowly a few times, and don’t rush.
  • Continue with 5-10 rounds of sun salutations. (Pick a variation that works for you.)
  • Move into the poses slowly to start and let your breath come naturally. Your body is extra sensitive at this time of day, so don’t push or force it to do anything it doesn’t want to do.
  • When you’re finished, sit in easy pose, close your eyes and take a minute to center yourself.

Give yourself a pat on the back for starting the day off with some mindful movements and for resisting the call of the snooze button. It’s been just 10 minutes and you’re ready to get on with the rest of your morning. Try this for a week, and notice the difference it makes. Not only will you feel more refreshed and awake when you’re done, but you’ll feel a sense of accomplishment knowing that you did something other than avoiding the start of another day.

Coostom is Walking the Walk

Did you know 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to clean drinking water?

Did you know 2.6 billion people live without basic sanitation?

Just imagine that:

no drinking
no cooking
no sink
no shower
no dishes
no laundry
no nothing

Except, of course, if you walk to the nearest river/well/etc and carry back your share. On your shoulders.

We want to help change this reality.

WaterCan/EauVive has been working for many years to help bring clean water to communities around the globe, particularly in Africa. This year’s Aveda Walk for Water, which benefits WaterCan/EauVive has as a mission to raise as much money as possible to save lives in East African communities by creating projects that provide clean water and education.

What Coostom is doing

Coostom will be participating in a 6km walk to raise awareness and funds to support WaterCan endeavours in East Africa. Why 6km? Because that’s the average distance that people in Africa have to walk to get to a water source.

A walk might seem like a small thing, but the more people are conscious of the huge difficulties people go through around the world, the more motivated we’ll be to find ways to help others build sustainable and rich communities.

Coostom needs your help!

So, here are ways in which you can help right now:

  1. Join the team! The best way to participate is to walk with us this April 22nd. We’ll have a great time, you’ll get to hang out with really cool people, and the exercise never hurts! There’s even a 7 month old baby in the team, how cool is that?!
  2. Make a donation to the Coostom team: If you can’t join us, you can make a direct donation to the cause here. 100% goes to the cause, and your support will be encouraging us to keep being a part of these initiatives.
  3. Buy a Coostom T-shirt or Sticker: If you want to support both WaterCan and Coostom at the same time, you can buy our T-shirts and/or stickers. Your contribution will cover the costs, and provide a little extra to be donated to W4W. Because of timing, we’ll have to do this old fashion: contact us at team@coostom.com and we’ll take care of you.

Coostom T-Shirt

Of course, you can combine more than one of the above, which will make us extra happy!

Finally, you can help us by spreading the word and directing people to our blog so that they too can support this great cause:

http://coostom.com/blog/walk/

Breathing Outside of Yoga Class


If you’ve been to a yoga class, chances are you’ve been told to breathe more than just a few times. In yoga, breath is a very important part of the practice. It is referred to as prana, or life force energy.

While in a yoga class, the focus is generally on moving the body in time with the breath. Taking big, full inhales and focusing on complete exhales, this practice benefits us by bringing fresh oxygen to all the tissues in our body, as well as helping to expel toxins.

This constant focus on the breath has another benefit: it assists us in maintaining a sense of concentration, relaxation, and one-pointedness of mind. With time, we get better and better at maintaining this focus for the duration of our yoga practice. But what happens when we leave the yoga room and return to the rest of our day? Most of us tend to forget about the breath altogether, not giving it a second thought until the next time we step onto our mats. How we breathe throughout the day, however, is just as important and deserving of our attention as how we breathe during yoga class. It can bring instant relief from stress, help to invigorate us when we are feeling tired, or center us when we feel our emotions spinning out of control. So the next time you walk out of your yoga class, take your breath with you and watch what happens.

Simple practices to try throughout the day:

  1. When you wake up in the morning, before you get out of bed, bring your attention to your belly. Take three full, deep breaths. Relax into the sensation.
  2. While driving, use each red light as an opportunity to turn the radio down and take a few conscious breaths.
  3. If you work at a desk job, set an Outlook reminder to go off every hour. When it does, stop what you are doing and take a deep breath (or two, or three.) Alternately, you can do this every time your telephone rings, or every time a new email pops up.
  4. Practice pausing for three breaths when you feel stress build up in your body. It will help send more oxygen to your brain and release tension.
  5. Before going to bed at night, finish the day with a few conscious breaths. Set aside any thoughts about your day, use the breath to release tension, and enjoy the feeling of not having anything more to do.

Why do you practice yoga?

That was the question we asked to a few of our fellow Yogis: Why do you practice yoga?. Here are the awesome answers we got:

From Lisa:

“Yoga helps make me a better athlete, manage stress and keeps me injury-free. It teaches me to live in the moment and become a more balanced person. And don’t forget the social benefits! I get to meet a lot of wonderful people!”

Laura said:

“I practice yoga because it brings me peace, calmness of mind, acceptance of the body and the freedom to let things be as they are in any given moment. On and off the mat, yoga inspires, challenges, supports and uplifts me every day.”

Carlos thinks:

“Yoga is a way of life – what I feel in every session is that I have the energy and knowledge to fulfill my goals, to be happy, and to make other people happier in this complicated World.

When more people do Yoga, or at least practice the Yoga principles, we will have a better world.”

And Natalia told us:

“I can get technical about this answer and say its because I know I’m the Ayurvedic version of Kapha and Yoga balances out the Vatta and Pitta in me. I can get spiritual and say that Yoga keeps my mind quite and my heart loud. Or, I can keep it simple and sum it up with: because I love it.”

People find all kinds of different reasons to return to the mat.

What about you? Why do you practice?