Practical and Adaptable Yoga Tips to Channel Joy Amongst Chaos with Brett Larkin [Episode #861]
This week’s topic is: Practical and Adaptable Yoga Tips to Channel Joy Amongst Chaos with Brett Larkin
I am so excited to have my very special guest, Brett Larkin, who is the founder of her award-winning YouTube channel, Uplifted™️Online Yoga Teacher Trainings, a successful entrepreneur, and sought-after online business consultant. Listen in as Brett shares the philosophy and practice of yoga, the adaptability and personalization of yoga, emphasizing the importance of tuning into one’s own needs and intuition, and so much more!
TOPICS COVERED
- 00:00 Introduction to Yoga and Guest Introduction
- 04:14 Transitioning Careers and Finding Purpose
- 08:25 Navigating Life’s Challenges and Loss
- 10:53 Adapting Yoga Practice to Personal Needs
- 18:17 The Origins of Yoga and Ayurveda
- 20:50 The Goal of Yoga and Presence in Practice
- 22:18 Yogic Adaptability and Personalization
- 25:54 The Cumulative Effect of Small Practices
- 28:16 Balancing Structure and Ease in Practice
- 30:45 Using Ayurveda to Personalize Yoga Practice
- 35:07 Conclusion and Where to Find More Information

About Brett Larkin
An award-winning digital pioneer in online yoga classes and teacher training, a successful wellness entrepreneur, author, and busy mom. A visionary in the wellness space, ex-videogame designer Brett Larkin was the first to introduce yoga education through mobile and SmartTV apps. Along with her 500,000-subscriber YouTube channel of free online yoga classes, Brett created the world’s first online yoga certification program in 2015, long before Covid, running it live and interactive in real-time. She’s certified thousands of teachers worldwide in her Uplifted Online Yoga Teacher Training programs. Yogis and healers turn to Brett not only to deepen their practice, but to jumpstart their own yoga business.
EPISODE SPONSORS
LMNT:
Right now LMNT is offering my listeners a free sample pack with any purchase, That’s 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. This is a great way to try all 8 flavors or share LMNT with a salty friend.
USE LINK: DrinkLMNT.com/FEELGOOD
Feel Good Detoxy:
USE LINK: shop.mysolluna.com/products/detoxy boosthealth for 20% off
I LOVE HEARING FROM YOU!
There are lots of ways to share your responses or questions about the podcast:
- Comment below
- Connect on Twitter: @_kimberlysnyder
- Follow the conversation on my Instagram
- Comment on my Facebook Page
- Ask a question: mysolluna.com/askkimberly
Be sure to Subscribe to the Podcast and follow me on Soundcloud, so you never miss an episode!
HOW TO SUBSCRIBE
You may be really intrigued by podcasts, but you may just know how to listen or subscribe. It’s very easy, I promise! To listen to more than one episode, and to have it all in a handier way, on your phone or tablet, it’s way better to subscribe so you never miss an episode!
Want to know what to expect from other episodes of the “Feel Good Podcast with Kimberly Snyder”? My passion is to inspire and empower you to be your most authentic and beautiful self. We offer interviews with top experts, my personal philosophies and experiences, as well as answers to community-based questions around topics such as health, beauty, nutrition, yoga, spirituality and personal growth.
The intention of the Feel Good Podcast is to well…help you really Feel Good in your body, mind and spirit! Feeling Good means feeling peaceful, energized, whole, uniquely beautiful, confident and joyful, right in the midst of your perfectly imperfect life. This podcast is as informative and full of practical tips and take-aways as it is inspirational. I am here to support you in being your very best! I have so much love and gratitude for you. Thank you for tuning in and being part of the community :).
RESOURCES
- SBO Probiotics
- Detoxy
- Digestive Enzymes
- Feel Good Starter Kit
- FREE Gift: 7-Day Meditation Series (DIGITAL COURSE)
- YOU ARE MORE
- Beauty Detox Solutions
- Beauty Detox Foods
- Beauty Detox Power
- Radical Beauty
- Recipes For Your Perfectly Imperfect Life
- Be a part of the community Join the Feel Good Circle
- Four Cornerstone FREE Guide: Text the word GUIDE to +1-855-741-0602
- Additional resources in transcript
- Brett Larkin Interview
Other Podcasts you may enjoy!:
- How Yoga Principles in Motherhood and Life can Improve Your Well-Being with Janet Stone
- 6 Things We Can Learn from the Spiritual Teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda
- The Power of Mantras, Heart-Based Yoga (Bhakti) and Community with Govind Das and Radha
- Tips on How to Work with Fire for Your Wellbeing and Energy
Powered and Distributed by: PodcastOne
Transcript:
Note: The following is the output of transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate. This is due to inaudible passages or transcription errors. It is posted as an aid, but should not be treated as an authoritative record.
Introduction to Yoga and Guest Introduction
Kimberly Snyder (00:01.362)
Hi loves and welcome back to our Monday interview show where I’m so excited to talk about one of my favorite subjects. Oh my gosh, Bri, I’m so sorry. I forgot to hit it on my thing. One second. Here we go.
Hi loves, welcome back to our Monday interview show. And I’m so excited to talk about one of my favorite subjects, which is yoga, not in terms of just the physical asanas and poses, but yoga in its totality, this ancient philosophy system of teachings about connecting to the true self and really being able to pour forth that incredible creativity, vitality, energy, health from this amazing philosophy.
And today I have a very special guest for you, Brett Larkin, who is a digital pioneer in the online training, online teaching of yoga space. She has over half a million subscribers on her YouTube channel and she has a new book out called Yoga Life, Habits, Poses and Breathwork to Channel Joy Amidst Chaos. So Brett, thank you so much for being here with us today.
brett (01:13.034)
Thank you, I’m so excited to connect with you and chat all things yoga and making it accessible and practical.
Kimberly Snyder (01:19.322)
Well, accessible and practical are two of my favorite words. I also like a word that you use in your book as well, adaptable. So we’ll get into all of that in just a moment. I love the flow of the book. I love that our philosophies align. Before we go further, if you guys are listening to this,
As you always have on Apple or Spotify, where you listen to our show usually, I just want to call out that we are now also on YouTube. So you can catch us on video format if that is of interest to you. Anytime you happen to be in front of a screen, I know a lot of you like to listen when you’re watching walking your dog or in the car, but this is also available. And also a little reminder that over on our website, mysolluna.com, we have all our…
amazing other offerings, including articles, other podcasts I think you would enjoy, guided meditations and more. All right. All that being said, let’s dive in deeper, Brett. Thank you again for joining us. I know you mentioned you are in Seattle right now, which I imagine this time of the year. It’s a little bit rainy outside, a little bit, I’ll say gloomy, but it forces us into the inner light, right? The inner light within.
brett (02:39.582)
Yes, no, it is. It’s totally gloomy, but I don’t mind because we do a lot of skiing, me and my family. So we have a little cabin and every weekend we’re up skiing. It’s one of the reasons we love living here is because we’re so close to the mountains. So it is gloomy, but yeah, feeling very radiant inside and happy to be here.
Kimberly Snyder (02:57.566)
How old are your little ones?
brett (03:00.354)
I have a six year old and my littlest guy just turned three and they’re both on skis already so that’s exciting.
Kimberly Snyder (03:07.346)
Wow. So I’m also a boy mom. I have a seven year old and a three year old.
brett (03:12.69)
Wow, I didn’t realize we had that much in common. That is so, so cool. Even kids the same ages. And it’s so magical. My little guys also love yoga and they love mantra. My three-year-old was actually chanting a whole grimoque mantra in the backseat of the car yesterday. I was like, ah, I need to film this for Instagram. But I couldn’t because my phone was playing the mantra, but it was so fun. And it’s just so beautiful to be giving them the tools of like breath work and nervous system regulation that I know a lot of us who are listening probably didn’t receive when we were kids.
Transitioning Careers and Finding Purpose
Kimberly Snyder (03:47.598)
It does feel that I feel like as more of us are waking up, there’s so many conversations around wellness and I don’t use the word mindfulness all the time because it makes me feel like up in the head, but just this awareness word you use a lot as well, presence. It’s a different time and we can really bring that into our family life. We can bring that into our own life and just create a different reality and break a lot of patterns from the past. So speaking of which, I loved reading about your bio and in the past you were even a, let me see if I’m saying this right, a video game designer, right? And I love how it all comes together. We can bring different skills and as powerhouses in the modern age and see how we can bring purpose and service, right? Imagine these skills.
brett (04:25.635)
Yes.
Kimberly Snyder (04:40.318)
have allowed you to create this platform where you can bring yoga out in a different way because of this other career that you had. Can you share a little bit about that?
brett (04:50.238)
I mean, I’m someone who thought I’d never make a living teaching yoga. I thought that if I taught yoga, I’d be destined to be poor. I had so many self-limiting beliefs about what was possible. And I worked in the corporate space. I worked for Ubisoft, which is one of the biggest video game companies in the world. At first, I made games for 13-year-old girls, which is perfect because I’m still a 13-year-old girl. So that was really fun. It was like these educational fantasy games for young girls. And then when We and Connect came out.
I know this is a long time ago now, but if anyone remembers playing Just Dance or any of those types of games, when those games came out, they didn’t have a lot of people at my video game company that knew about movement or that knew about dance and I had been a dancer. So it was just this really beautiful fusion where I got to step in and make these dance routines really approachable for people who might be doing them at home. So I kind of was the go-between between the choreographer and the technical team.
Kimberly Snyder (05:32.423)
Uh-uh.
brett (05:47.51)
And it was so, so fun. I even worked on the Beyonce dance game. I got to motion capture Beyonce, which was a huge highlight for me. That game never got released because it then got tied up in legal issues, believe it or not. But from the Michael Jackson dance game, I had so much fun in that career. But I had this secret dream and longing to teach yoga, but it just didn’t feel viable. And then some changes happened at my full-time job where the movement dance fad
and then was kind of falling down. And then like Farmville, do you remember back when like Farmville and all those like mass social games began to get really popular? And so I wasn’t as into that. And I could have kept working on the dance games, but I would have had to move to Europe. And I wasn’t willing to do that because I was in a relationship at the time. And so that’s when I ended up working more in like tech, startup tech, which was really a cool experience. But that’s when it was like nights and weekends, I started fantasizing about like,
teach yoga online. Could I, once my YouTube channel started, I was like, could I turn this into something? And you’re absolutely right, because it’s weird how the universe works and works through us, because there was so much synergy in the prior careers that I think helped me start Uplifted Yoga.
Kimberly Snyder (07:04.314)
Wow, I love that. We never know where our paths are gonna go. And how, when I started out, I was backpacking for years around the world. All my friends were already getting fancy jobs when we graduated from Georgetown. And I just didn’t feel drawn into getting into…my career quite yet, I couldn’t put my finger on it. But then it turned out when I started my blog and started my philosophy, so much of what I learned on the road and camping across Africa and being in India had such a huge impact on my life. So I always love to share that message and just say, you know, it’s one step at a time. We don’t have to plan out our whole lives because we’re always growing no matter what job we’re in or even if we’re in a relationship that doesn’t necessarily work out. we’re open to growth, we’re open to learning every step of the way, it contributes in the most beautiful way. And so another part of the journey that deeply resonated with me that we share, Brett, I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but I also lost a parent, my mom, right when I became a first time mom. So she passed from cancer within days of my first, my older son turning one.
brett (08:01.646)
Absolutely.
Navigating Life’s Challenges and Loss
Kimberly Snyder (08:25.306)
Right? So it was this moment of, oh, I’m a new mom and now I’m losing my mom. And then my dad was, you know, they had been married for, you know, 30 some years. He was just checked out. He couldn’t handle it. So it was like, I just remember being in the carrier or having my baby in the carrier, being in the hospital, having those conversations. And it’s these moments of, you know, we can either get overwhelmed and paralyzed or
brett (08:45.99)
Um, yeah.
Kimberly Snyder (08:54.702)
we start to tune into this totally different kind of strength that rises up in us, that comes from a deeper place, this true self place.
brett (09:05.174)
I can’t believe we also have that in common. I’m kind of getting chills. I called this book Yoga Life because the reframe here is that yoga is not another thing on your to-do list. Your whole life is a yoga studio and you can sprinkle the wisdom, the magic, what I call the yoga glitter, into every aspect of your life, even if it’s just here and there between other activities because you have a crazy day and can’t make it to the mat. That’s why it’s amidst the chaos, right? Because for me,
That transition that you’re talking about when I became a new mom and then lost my father to cancer that same year, I literally in my home, I had my newborn in his room, and then I had my dad on hospice care in the bedroom right next door in my house, and I was his sole care provider. My parents were divorced, I don’t have any siblings, my dad did not remarry. So when I say it was like me and him walking through a death portal, and me arranging all the care, the insurance, the reimbursements, like everything, and of course my business was really growing and scaling that year as well.
And what happened is I realized that I couldn’t practice the yoga that I was used to practicing anymore because I literally just had no time and my life was too chaotic. Up to that point, I was going to studio classes or I was doing a 60 to 90 minute practice at home of a lot of poses, a lot of meditation. And in the chaos of my new normal between trying to keep my newborn from cliff diving off the couch and dealing with bedpans and, you know, hospice care for my dad,
and running my team and my whole business, I felt like yoga was failing me. I felt like I was drowning because I couldn’t do a long practice anymore. And they say necessity is the mother of invention, but that kind of, that was sort of a rock bottom year for me emotionally in so many ways, but it’s what birthed, what became the framework, the personalization framework, and these mini practices that I teach in the book.
Adapting Yoga Practice to Personal Needs
Kimberly Snyder (10:53.706)
Wow, amazing. You know, I love hearing about that. Thank you for sharing. I can really empathize and also know I’ve been in that position of there’s so much on me. You know, I think we’ve all felt that in different ways, just the overwhelm of, you know, life happening and a lot of things happening at the same time. So thank you for sharing that. And I wanted to share with you, my practice also radically shifted.
when my mom passed away. So like you, I had a serious vinyasa practice. I studied with Dharma Mitra. I studied with Shiva Ray. It was, you know, a 90 minute series, very intense, lots of handstands, lots of really deep back bends. And I can’t describe it exactly to people. They ask, you know, why did you stop your asana practice? Right? Because it really shifted where my practice became very internal.
Whereas meditation was a piece, meditation became my whole practice. And for movement, I started feeling called to barefoot grounding beach walks every day. It was almost grounding my body just to be connected to the earth. So I really shifted and I moved away from the asanas. And now they are still in my life, but it’s more like yin yoga, stretching in the evening with my husband. So it really changed, right? And I think we shift in ways that, you know, if we’re in tune with our bodies, we don’t always…
have the language for, but it just felt intuitively right to me. So I love the asanas, but I didn’t have that sort of same practice anymore. And it was.
brett (12:30.418)
Yeah, I can relate to that. I think a lot of people, I think we’re going through a shift right now collectively, where yoga has been very much prescriptive, right, and handed down very often from then, right, that there’s a certain way, a certain style in which to do things, that there are a lot of rules. And what happened to me during this year, and I’ll share it, like how I actually practiced during that kind of rock bottom year was I would set a timer on my phone.
for however long I had. A lot of times that was 10 minutes, some days, like a good day was like 20 minutes, 15 minutes. And I would tune inward exactly like you’re saying. And I’d ask like, how do I feel? What do I want? What can I do in this very short amount of time that would be deeply nourishing for me? And sometimes it was things that were very strange, like doing cacao in a super weird way or blending Kundalini and yin, which I had been taught by my teachers was…
Kimberly Snyder (13:17.812)
Mmm.
brett (13:28.042)
like not allowed, not something you were supposed to do. You can’t alter the creas, like all these rules. So out of desperation, I was just like, you know what? I’m gonna throw out all these rules, even some sequencing rules that I was teaching to other people. I’m like, all of this is just gonna go by the wayside and I’m gonna honor what I need to do. And I’ll never forget this one day, I practiced in this style, like Brett style yoga, right? Just honoring me and my individuality and what I needed in that moment to feel nourished.
And I remember finishing and getting to a place, probably a seat, and being like, wow, I feel so grounded. I feel so good. I had kind of that yoga glow. And my timer hadn’t gone off yet. And my first thought was like, oh, shit, my phone died. What have I missed? And then I ran and I looked at my phone and I had set my phone for, I think, a 20-minute practice that day. And it was only 18 minutes on the timer.
Kimberly Snyder (14:20.288)
No!
brett (14:21.666)
But because I had tuned inward and practiced what I call the soulmate poses, the poses that usher you into a flow state, the fastest and the most efficiently, which are different for each of us, depending on our personality. And because I picked, you know, breath work and poses that were uniquely suited to me, I was able to feel as good after an 18 minute personalized practice than I did after like a 90 minute group class. And that’s when I really had this aha moment. I was like, Oh my gosh.
Kimberly Snyder (14:31.922)
Yeah.
brett (14:50.338)
how did I do this and how do I teach this to other people? And I didn’t have time to write a book or even know what I was doing at that time, but that was like the aha moment that then years later, I kind of figured out this framework around.
Kimberly Snyder (15:03.582)
that tuning in this intuition, it’s such a powerful tool, as you mentioned in practice, it’s such a key to healthy eating as well, right? When you talk about this linear approach, rules, how people try to follow diets, right? And in my experience, when people really tune in, right before they eat a meal, right before they cook, while they’re grocery shopping,
We get a different sense for what is needed in our unique energetic blueprint at that moment. So I really love that and also freeing ourselves from the group class idea that that’s the only way to practice yoga, which is really prohibitive for a lot of people. A lot of people can’t make it to the studio. A lot of people don’t live near studios, busy moms like us can’t carve out the time. Or I know for myself, I speak for myself, can’t drive there, spend an hour and a half, drive back.
It’s tough, right? So just this idea of unshackling ourselves that, you know, yoga looks like this, we put on the Lycra, we drive, we show up, we have to be in a group, because that’s not how it was traditionally practiced, per se.
brett (16:15.518)
Yeah, and let’s talk about that because I say some pretty controversial things in this book, especially in chapter two, when I talk about how yoga came West. There’s a lot of things that went missing in that migration. And one of the key things, and I think you’d agree with me on this, is Ayurveda, right? So I say that yoga was always meant to be practiced within the context of its sister science, which was Ayurveda. And…
when we look back at the actual origins of yoga, even how it first came into the first Akara, which was like the prototypical yoga studio, the first yoga studio we had at the end of the 1800s. Before that, people were practicing by rivers and outdoors and in caves and things like that. But when we look that even then in Mysore, no one was ever doing the same poses the same way on the same breath cadence.
When yoga came west, it got enmeshed with the group fitness movement that was happening in the 1970s and 80s here in America. So it kind of got blended with the Jane Fonda movement. But when we look back originally, the way these classes actually worked is that people would come together and practice in silence. And the teacher would go around and individually give each person new poses or help them modify or adapt what they were doing based on what they needed as an individual.
And so it wasn’t like everyone were doing like the Ashtanga primary series A, it was very much like, okay, you’re ready to learn more poses, and the teacher would go over and whisper and work with one person and then go over and whisper with someone else. I want to, I’m painting the visuals here because I want us to really understand like how different that is than what we practice now, where it’s like this expectation that we’re all supposed to look the same, be moving on the same breath cadence.
That actually isn’t true to the original spirit of yoga based on the research I did for this book. Not to mention that the asana practice is such a small piece of what yoga really is when we look at the totality of how yoga can affect our life and be integrated into our life.
The Origins of Yoga and Ayurveda
Kimberly Snyder (18:17.414)
Yes, thank you for that. I did experience when I practiced in really traditional ashrams in India when I was backpacking, it was a very different style and it was mostly the pranayama, the breath work and the meditation. Paramahansa Yogananda, who really brought, he was the yogi who came after Vivekananda, but actually established his home in America, who my last book was about.
You are more than you think you are. He just talked about with yogic science with such force. He met with the president of the United States. He was initiating Gandhi into Kriya yoga. Kriya yoga is all in your spine. So there’s very little physical movement. And again, he would teach, you know, the asanas, Hatha yoga is in support of what is going on in your central nervous system. This moving away from the senses inside. And then somehow the Western as you, you know,
fitness movement took it into most people thinki
More like this
Optimizing your Preconception Health & Fertility with Dr Ann Shippy [Ep. #1023]
The Importance of Nitric Oxide and How to Optimize our Body’s Production of it with Dr. Nathan S. Bryan [EP. #1022]
Heart Healthy, Plant-Based Eating with Dr. Jenneffer Pulapaka [Ep. #1021]
Fawning: How We Can Lose Ourselves and How to Come Back with Dr. Ingrid Clayton [Episode #1018]
The Science of Longevity: Plaque Heart Scans, Cancer Screening, Glutathione & More with Dr. Julianna Lindsey [EP#1018]
Empowered Knowledge of Perimenopause for any Stage with Dr. Mariza Snyder [Ep. #1016]
Getting to the Root of Food and Other Addictions with Dr. Jason Giles [EP. #1015]
October Solluna Power Hour: Building Resilience & Strength Emotionally, Physically, and Spiritually [Episode #1014]
Handling Anxiety & Conflict in Kids (and Humans!) with Connection with NYT Bestselling Author Alyssa Blask Campbell [Episode 1013]
The Connection Between Body Movements and our Emotional & Physical health with Henry Abbott [EP. #1011]
September Solluna Power Hour: Essential Rhythms and Rituals to feel Grounded, Clear and Energized [Episode 1009]
Overcoming Trauma through Somatic Body Healing with Britt Piper [Episode 1008]
Relieving Anxiety and Panic with Dr. Nicole Cain [Episode 1007]
Practices to Do Right Before Bed to Improve Your Energy with Oliver Nino [Episode #1006]
How Lifestyle and Bio-Identical Hormone options can help balance your hormones with Dr Erika Schwartz [Episode #1005]
Solutions for Anxiety in Real Life with Dr. Caroline Leaf [Episode #1003]
Incorporating Ayurvedic Wisdom into Everyday Eating with Kate O'Donnell [EP# 1002]
Navigating a Good Death for Ourselves and Loved Ones with Suzanne O’Brien [Episode 1001]
Closing the Courage Gap with Margie Warrell [Episode 1000]
The Impact of Food Colorings & Synthetic Dyes on our Health with Brandon and Whitney Cawood [Episode #999]
July Solluna Power Hour Tips Show - Embracing Creativity Over Hustle [Episode 998]
Discovering What Matters in a Distracted World with Soren Gordhamer [Episode #996]
Creating Meaningful Friendships and Life with Krista Williams [Episode #995]
Creating Plant-based and Other Lifestyle Shifts Worldwide with Ghanim Al Sulaiti [Episode #994]
June Solluna Four Cornerstones Power Hour Tips Show: Summer Wellness [Episode #993]
Understanding the “Great” Vagus Nerve with Dr. Kevin Tracey [Episode #992]
Finding Healthy Sexual Expression with Danielle Harel and Celeste Hirschman [Episode #991]
Breaking Free from the Cage of Ambition and the Relentless Pursuit of More with Keren Eldad [Episode #990]
How to Improve Your Pelvic Floor for Better Health with Alicia-Jeffrey Thomas [Episode #989]
Discovering Joy and Overcoming Perfectionism in your Life with Dr. Tiffany Moon [Episode 988]
