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Top Ibiza yoga teacher

Susie was functioning perfectly from the outside, but inside was merely existing, with a series of broken relationships making her feel further trapped and uninspired. “Yoga allowed me to connect to something so much greater and more powerful,” she explains of her transformation. Today, she is one half of the powerhouse female duo behind Ibiza Retreats, and finds herself helping many other people through the same experiences and issues she herself originally felt when she felt the need for a change. “Connecting to so many wonderful people and their awe-inspiring journeys has given me the strength and courage to be authentic and present,” she says. “In today’s society, no one’s ‘got time’ so you have to work with what you’ve got. Even if it’s just five minutes a day, getting on the mat is so important. You have to work with what you’ve got.”

When did you first discover yoga? I was a real gym bunny in my early 20s and I first tried a typical power yoga class in my gym. It was something I got into for exercise and I originally saw it as another way to keep healthy in my body and stay slim. Then I started going to Jivamukti classes – it was the high intensity and the music of that style that attracted me. Did you feel an instant connection to the practice? It was more like, the more I got into yoga, the less I thought about it as an exercise. I’d been suffering anxiety on the side with a really stressful job and yoga became a real medicine for me. Then the more I got into the meditation and the spiritual side of it, it really helped me. I wasn’t really a spiritual person, I was more like a girl on the edge… What kind of benefits you were seeing? Yoga helped me to get my head together and it became something I spent more and more time doing. Rather than being at work all the time, and focusing on my job, I started spending more time in the studio, looking at how I felt, doing more classes and meeting amazing people. My weekends became more about yoga – I had been a big party girl and yoga gave me the pathway to make a huge transition. It was amazing for me. At what point did you make the decision to become a teacher? I didn’t ever have the conscious intention to become a teacher. After about three years of practice, I decided to do a teacher training course as I thought it was a healthy choice. I wanted to deepen my practice and learn a little bit more about the philosophy, meditation, the depths of the asanas and I loved it.

Tell us about your training? I did a course called Teach Yoga which was more transitory than some of the intensives you see now – it allowed me to do it gradually, every other weekend over the course of a year and a half. It wasn’t something I could just jump into. It was with a lovely Italian lady who was an ex-GP, so for me it was a good in-road into yoga as it appealed to my logical side. How did you make the transition from student to teacher? I started teaching at work, on a Friday night or lunchtime, just to get some practice. I had a few clients I would teach on the side and then I went on a couple of retreats. The more I’d go down the yoga path, I’d go back to work and sit and my desk thinking ‘what am I doing here’? I’d been really passionate about my job previously, but I’d be working on dog food, mayonnaise or vodka advertising and I just couldn’t find my place anymore. So, I went on a last-minute retreat holiday (to mend a bruised broken heart) to Ibiza in 2010, which was the decision point for me. Six months later I arrived on the island with my little backpack, ready to make my way. What was it about that experience in particular that moved you? I’d only ever been in Ibiza to go clubbing before and there was something about this retreat that was just so beautiful and charming. It was high up in the mountains in Santa Agnes, with absolutely nothing else around. I stayed for two weeks and as soon as I got home, I knew I didn’t want to go back to my old life. The experience allowed me to say, I’m done with that. How did you make the connection with Ibiza Retreats? Yoga connections are amazing! A friend who I’d met on my teacher training course was mutual friends with Larah [Davis, co-founder] and told me I should meet her. In my second week on the island, we met in La Paloma – she was looking for a business partner, I was fresh from the UK with a lot of experience and enthusiasm. The rest, as they say, is history.

Who has been one of the most influential person in your yoga journey? There was a teacher called Vanda Scaravelli, who passed away over ten years ago. She trained with Iyengar, and what I love about her is that afterwards she said: “Thank you for all the lessons and all the things you’ve taught me, but I am a woman, not a young Indian man and my body doesn’t really work that way, so I am going to take what I have learned and look at what else influences me.” Her book is called Awakening the Spine and I first picked it up early on in my journey and thought, oh whatever. Now I read it, after going through my own transformation, and it makes so much sense. There is no prescribed approach, she takes a lot of cues from nature, the sea, the organic style of breathing… she fascinates me. Tell us about the style of classes you teach? I’ve been through all different variations and colours of the rainbow, but it’s still Vinyasa based – I like to have that movement and breath connection. When you first start teaching, you’re quite focused on ‘that’s what a warrior looks like’ or ‘that’s what a triangle looks like’ but over time it has become much more organic for me. I encourage my students to follow their own internal compass, so we improvise parts of the class and it’s more of a somatic experience, for them to close their eyes and go inside, rather than me dictating this, this and this. I think it’s empowering them to go inside and find their own practice –  every single body has got a different story. How do you describe your relationship with your students? I really love doing one to one classes. I feel my strength lies with the individual and I like getting to know people and watch their bodies change holistically – the spiritual body, the emotional body and the physical body. A lot of the clients I have now have been with me for six or seven years and we’ve grown together. It’s a personal and private relationship and I love that. How do you describe your personal teaching methods? We have fun. I’m not too serious about it all, though of course I can be when there’s a need to be, but we can have a giggle as we explore things. I’m not just sitting there and directing, there’s a lot of hands-on. We take it step by step and it’s really about understanding what each client wants and feeling them. You need to learn to read people – it’s like a language. Sometimes you meet a client and they’ll tell you what they want to do and you can see their nervous system buzzing… as you go through the practice with them, what they need becomes clear and afterwards they feel so good because they’ve listened, rather than doing what they think they needed. That, for me, is key. We’re not our thoughts, we’re not our minds – we need to come inside and feel.

What is your own yoga philosophy? It’s about connecting to yourself. The word spiritual gets bandied around so much, and there is so much craziness in this world right now, that I think yoga is a practice that anchors you when everything around you is chaos. If you can develop a practice – whether that might be sitting on your mat meditating or a strong Vinyasa – that’s what will ground you, the connection to yourself. What is your own personal practice like? Day to day it changes, so it reflects how I am feeling. Some days I get on the mat and I’m a warrior woman and I can do a really strong practice and other days, I’ll do a really long savasana and just some gentle moves around. I think as long as you get to your mat, it doesn’t matter how you formulate your practice. It’s about how you feel that day and it’s so important that you can honour yourself, by listening and tuning into that. That’s when you start to see and feel big changes. Do you ever practice under the guidance of other teachers? I do. I go to other classes at least twice a week because it’s so nice to be taught and to be in that collective energy of being and breathing. Sometimes, when it’s really busy in Ibiza and running the business is taking up a lot of time, it’s nice to go into a studio and shut the doors, just know that for the next hour and a half, you’ve got time with yourself. Tell us about one of your most profound yoga experiences? The first time I went to India, I had an amazing experience. I didn’t do mainstream India, I went straight out to the depths of Karnataka and stayed with an Indian family. I was so out of my comfort zone and my anxiety was completely triggered. I worked with a teacher in this village for two weeks and when I first arrived I just wanted to get out of there! He said: “Well you can just get back on those four buses you came on for the last day and go back.” So I stayed, and it was really profound and beautiful. We went out to a field to meditate at sunset once and I remember I really got into it and as I opened my eyes there were about 30 cows there just staring at us… we’d conjured this whole herd around us, and you know how sacred cows are in India!

How do you feel about the yoga industry becoming commercialised? It’s great that yoga has become something that is accessible to everyone – there are so many great benefits to it. That the positive side of it. A lot of young people are practicing these days which is great and you just have to keep spreading the integrity. What do you find most rewarding about teaching? When you can really help people to connect with themselves. I love getting to know people and see positive changes in their lives. We get so many testimonials from people after they’ve been on retreat and made huge life changes and it’s an honour to be part of that. All we’re doing is showing them the tools and techniques and it gives them this platform to leave jobs they’re unhappy in, make huge changes in relationships, to clear enough emotional space aside to have a baby. If you go in with your open heart and such passion like we do, that’s what people will feel, love and acceptance. What do you find most challenging? When you meet people who just want to do an exercise class and you just think, there’s so much more I wish you could see. It can be frustrating because I only get one hour with them but I wish I could spend more time to show them how beautiful the practice can be. Have you got a yoga ‘wow’ moment? I have a lot of times when I want to pinch myself – the wow moments are not few and far between. When I finish teaching a class or doing a class, I always get that moment of elation, the endorphins, the feeling of connection and that huge gratitude for the practice.

Larah Davis

In her early teens, she suffered severe spinal injury in a car accident, and the ongoing pain from this caused her to seek beyond modern medicine for an alternative way to heal her own body. Today, she is renowned as one of Ibiza’s leading wellness experts, with Ibiza Retreats hosting a wide variety of transformational holistic wellness retreats, grounded in yoga, for guests hailing from all walks of life and all over the world. It is here Larah feels she is living her true purpose of serving from the heart through the yoga, yoga therapy, holistic coaching, energy work and the ongoing development and refinement of the retreat concepts to bring life-enhancing tools and techniques to empower their retreat guests.

When did you first discover yoga and what attracted you to the practice?
In my early 20s, I was experiencing debilitating levels of physical pain. It was the aftermath of a very serious road accident in which my spine suffered significant trauma. Physiotherapy and general medicine only dealt with localised injury, whilst the trauma needed to be released from the nervous system in order for me to recover holistically.  I didn’t want to be on painkillers for the rest of my life so I started to seek alternative healing options. With every exercise program I started I would run into injury – I hadn’t awakened my body’s intelligence and didn’t know how to listen to my limits. When I was at university, I encountered yoga through one of my professors. Aged 64, he was teaching Shadow Yoga classes for just £2 per session, with the desks pushed back in a classroom. He was so calm, centered and incredibly strong and flexible – and his qualities were deeply inspiring: I remember thinking of my first class: “this is so challenging!” And I always loved a challenge.

Did you feel an instant connection to the practice?
I felt the connection with my professor, which was amazing, and then I felt the connection with my self as a whole being, at different levels – body, mind, breath and…. my spirit. I remember the first downward dog and how it challenged me mentally, energetically and physically. I loved how I really HAD to feel had to breathe more deeply, had to meet my limits – and how that connected me with my truth, my shadows and also my light and potential. When you feel that inner connection, it’s like – click! You start to connect to a deeper source of knowledge and innate intelligence – as humans, we often need to feel convinced by feeling at the physical level, then we can refine and learn to control and utilise the breath, then we can get closer to mastering the monkey mind, all this has to happen before we can access the “Anandamaya” bliss level.

What was it that you identified with about yoga during that time?
Yoga is a journey of many lifetimes, yet what I loved most (as a very driven goal-oriented young woman) was that advanced yoga was not about whether you achieve the harder poses or not. Over time I realised that it was as much about surrender and acceptance of my state of being at that moment, on that day.  In essence, I was mesmerised by tuning into this subtler, deeper connection to myself and how I could truly tune in to and maintain this connection through my yogic practice.

When did you start to develop a regular practice?
I carried on studying with my professor and, when I started working in New York, I tried other classes, but they’d be full of 60 people, fast-paced and taught in Sanskrit… and, after too many stiff necks and sore shoulders I became concerned about injury, especially as I was very bendy and had a propensity to hyper-extend through my spine. So I started to explore different teachers and study every type of yoga that crossed my path. My first Ashram experience [in NYC] was a pivotal point in my journey – in my evenings, I was hosting one of the hottest restaurants in Manhattan, and on the other, I was really still seeking – beyond the physical side of yoga. I was living with a white light healer in the West Village, who invited me to meet her guru… and that’s when yoga went to the next, deeper (or higher!) level.

Tell us about the Ashram experience?
She took me up in a lift in the old Chelsea Hotel – where Sid Vicious killed Nancy Spungeon – of all places, and on the seventh floor, we entered an apartment that had been converted into an Ashram, with plush deep red carpets and soft calm lighting.  It was like opening a door into another dimension. The vibration was so high and light in there, it was overwhelming – pure love. Everyone was chanting mantras, and, when Baba (the guru) entered, his presence alone emanated peace, love and calm. This was my first ‘satsang’, (a talk by a guru or enlightened being). As he started to talk, I realised this was what I had been seeking – a naked, non-dogmatic truth that was pure and from the heart.

How did this change your direction in life?
I realised brand management in New York wasn’t where I was supposed to be, and, following my Ashram experience, I felt plugged in to a deeper sense of knowing.  I began to follow this – my inner-guidance system, my intuition. I went back to London to finish my degree, and during that time I came to Ibiza to live for a while. I’d been coming to Ibiza since I was 16, to dance and feel free. For me, there was always a spiritual connection and Ibiza was always a place where I could really be myself. It always felt healing, enchanting, inspiring. I loved the philosophical and esoteric conversations I’d have with people here, the colourful people, the natural beauty, the high vibrations and the sense of living more simply. Then a friend in Australia asked me to help him manage his musical career and I sensed that this felt right – so I booked a one-way ticket to Sydney find my purpose.

Tell us about this journey?
I went to the opening of a Day Retreat in Sydney in 2001. The woman fronting the company asked me to help her build her life transformation company offering workshops in Sydney and retreats in the blue mountains. I was already studying energetic and spiritual healing at the Natural Healthcare College in Sydney, but I didn’t know what the Life Coaching or Neuro Linguistic Programming was that her business was offering. I said to her: “If this is what we’re going to be doing with people, I need to be doing it too” and so, alongside my daily yoga practice and ongoing yoga studies, I began to learn this vital tools and techniques for enhancing your emotional and physical wellbeing and for living a happier, healthier life. This cognitive approach would later enhance my teaching at every level – and I always had yoga in the background, underpinning the cognitive and energetic studies. Yoga was my foundation. For someone who’s really cerebral, it helped me really get out of my head and into my body, to access and sculpt my energy to serve me and life better.

How did you get involved with retreats?
With this Life Transformations company, we started offering fully integrated wellness retreats to people with depression, high-stress lifestyles, insomnia, who were dealing with functional illnesses – which is what we do with Ibiza Retreats now – and it was up in the Blue Mountains outside Sydney that I developed a 360-degree multi-sensorial approach to retreats.

At what point did you make the decision to become a yoga teacher?
I had studied and studied many different styles of yoga – Vinyasa Flow, Hatha, Sivananda, Iyengar – all over the world. But it was when I moved to Ibiza 10 years ago, that I started looking for a course to train as a teacher. I had started Ibiza Retreats, and had qualifications in Energetic and Spiritual Healing, Life Coaching, NLP – but was looking for the right teacher to truly inspire me. You really meet yourself when you commit to a teacher training and I was seeking someone with the wisdom and life experience to professionally hold that space for a deep journey and who could offer an integral yoga experience, grounded in a therapeutic approach. For me, the path of yoga has always been about self healing and self-empowerment, with a very individualised approach for each person. In the end,  it was  Nora Belton I did my first teacher training with, who had a very therapeutic and well-rounded approach – it was amazing.

Have you done any other trainings since then?
Yes. I have studied with many teachers and since 2015, have been training in Yoga Therapy with the brilliant faculty at the Yoga Campus at The Life Centre in London.  The therapeutic knowledge and application is vital for the working consciously with the many ailments, issues and physical injuries that present on our retreats and ensures we can provide a safe practice that challenges many individuals at different, life-enhancing levels.

Tell us about the style of yoga you teach today?
It’s a creative therapeutic hatha vinyasa flow which is creative and highly individualised. Rather than pre-writing an entire script of postures and pranayama beforehand, I do a basic preparation for the class and then tune into the yogis on the mat and invite them to tune in to their needs and ‘Sankalpas’ intentions at that moment – on that day. It may involved restorative elements or be more dynamic and revitalizing – it all depends on the purpose of the practice for that person (or group of people) on that day.

Does the yoga taught at Ibiza Retreats also follow this style?
This approach is offered by all of our co-teachers on retreats. Our mission is to empower our guests to take home a self-practice that enables them to enhance their health, happiness and inner-journey and healing processes when back in daily life too. It’s always tailor-made to bring the best benefits possible to where our yogis are in the present moment, physically, emotionally and energetically – and I love teaching to amazing music and including mantras to open up the heart and throat chakras too!

How do you describe your relationship with your students?
I feel like I’m the taxi driver! I see yoga as multi-sensory medicine for body, heart and mind.  I’m here to facilitate an experiential journey of self discovery, by their sides, through their body, through their breath, through their awareness. I love inviting students to experience rather than achieve and through this approach, enabling them to awaken their own body intelligence and to listen to and trust themselves (rather than simply following my teaching cues). When it comes ot the deeper inner-journey of self-knowledge and healing, I let my clients lead, first by embracing blockages and pain as a tool for self-enquiry and learning – rather than seeing pain as a limitation, they learn why pain is there and what they have created in their lives that caused it – both physically and emotionally.  And of course, I offer yoga as an elegant and inspiring range of beautiful tools and techniques to release stress and tensions and to access peace, positivity and calm. The yogic journey always offers transformation and transformation is most powerful when my clients are leading THEIR way, at their pace, themselves.

How do you describe your personal teaching methods?
Intuitive. Therapeutic. Diagnostic. Empowering. Gentle, breath-led, always inviting my students to come back from the mind and to recognise when it’s the mind leading, and when they are really riding the breath and listening to that soft voice within. That for me is the integral part of Vinyasa Flow: the breath, synergised with movement, in a magical, vibrant harmony.

What is your own yoga philosophy?
Self-acceptance and self-love leads to self empowerment. Accept where you are now and truly challenge yourself to feel it. Listen to your inner-truth in that moment, then love yourself enough to listen to that truth. If it means surrendering into child’s pose rather than keeping up with the rest of the class, dare to do it – and this will empower you to make yoga your. Yoga is about union of body-mind-heart-and spirit – therefore it is not about looking at what the person on the next mat is doing, nor comparing what you can do.  It is about witnessing yourself, learning about yourself, surprising yourself and challenging yourself not to as often as to.  Maybe today is the right day to get your legs up over your head… But what is the purpose of that, right now, for you? Being true to yourself amps up your energy massively – as you release the pressure you put on yourself, you release pressure in your muscles and nerve endings too. As you find freedom in body, mind and breath – you can find freedom off the mat too.

Is there anyone in the yoga world who inspires you today?
There is a teacher called Uma Dinsmore Tuli, who has written an incredible bible on yoga for women called Yoni Shakti. She’s at the vanguard of yoga for women’s wellness internationally. She is phenomenal and has researched and developed a wealth of knowledge and a sophisticated, yet very authentic, cut the crap approach. She’s all about honouring yourself, honouring the shakti, making it fun, singing plenty of mantras, juicing up the energy in the class…  and yoga nidrra! (yogic sleep). She inspired me as a real human being and mother of three, with all these different perspectives and responsibilities in life, to try to integrate yoga at every level into my life, including my journey of motherhood and family life.

What is your own personal practice like?
Right now, as mother of a baby and a 6-year old It’s more integral than ever. It could be that I am just doing 15 minutes in the morning one day and the next day it’s 40 minutes, or 20 minutes in the afternoon with my legs up over a chair. It is purpose focused. What do I need today to be cenetred, strong, relaxed, focused and calm? I adapt my practice to suit my Sankalps and incorporate plenty of restorative yoga, and yoga bidras (the yogic sleep you enter via the theta state of self healing) into my teaching as well as my self practice, because our society now is so over stimulated. Our nervous systems are exhausted. It’s all about how to make the most of your 15 minutes to get to where you need to be. I’ve got a yoga deck under an almond tree, so when my baby’s asleep, I take longer there and dive into intuitive flow. But I do yoga every day. There is such a huge difference between the way you feel when you do, to when you don’t. It’s like drinking water or brushing your teeth! I am so much kinder, so much nicer and so much more centered with more patience and energy. I am much more balanced and I am stronger.

Do you still practice under the guidance of other teachers?
Yes! Some of my favourites are here. I love practicing with Suzanne Slocum Gori, she’s amazing and I really feel I am learning a lot more for myself as well as for my teaching methodologies when I train with her. I love Leana – she has a lot of Scaravelli inspired details and compassionate alignment principles, a therapeutic approach and recognising that one size does not fit all when it comes to asana alignment techniques. I also love Vivienne who teaches with me and for me on our retreats, she’s just gorgeous and has a very feminine energy and creative, somatic approach.

The topic of women’s yoga and empowerment seems to come up often…
This is the direction I am going into more now, into women’s wellness through yoga, pre and post natal, female empowerment. I love really inviting women to learn how to nourish themselves, their needs, their bodies, to create a new sense of body mind beautiful throughout the different stages (and challenges) of life.  Through living in London and NY, I became aware of the male go-go-go over-active energy that was running destructive patterns inside of me. I needed to learn how to ground, to rest, to receive and to reconnect to my intuitive self, in order to rebalance this. What’s also interesting is when it’s men that I’m teaching, I normally find ways for them to incorporate more yin, receptive  and female energies into their practice. Sometimes us women need to cultivate more core strength and yang warrior energy – it is all about balance!

Where can people practice with you on the island?
I’ve just started Mamalove Yoga & Baby classes, coming with your baby, on Tuesday mornings which resume in September and I also teach private classes – until next spring when I return to teach on our retreats, because my other yoga is my karma ‘mama’ yoga, As a mother to two small children, I am practicing the Bhakti yoga of devotion to their wellbeing as well as overseeing the wellbeing of Ibiza Retreats from the background. My children are my greatest gurus of all for sure. This is something that needs to be rekindled in the yoga world. Karma Yoga is the yoga of giving back, without expecting anything in return. All about kindness and giving. When you’re selflessly giving, it gives you energy and opens your heart exponentially.

Tell us about one of your most profound yoga experiences?
Each moment that I feel myself ‘drop in’ to my body and heart, when my practice becomes a true union, the feeling of peace that descends, from my muscles to my mind, is awe-inspiring. Underlined of course, by the time I received the Shakti Pat from a Guru in NYC, at that first Ashram. The divine Kundalini energies rising up my spine resulted in all the pain and tensions caused by my previous car accident just melting away. There were surges of love and bliss flowing through my whole system until the next morning. That was when I KNEW I had to get more of this natural high, from following my purpose, my Dharma (life path) to serve others. Another was being in such a deep ‘no-mind’ state, that I found myself in headstand without knowing how I had got there!

Have you got a yoga ‘wow’ moment?
Yes! Many. From practicing at sunset in front of Es Vedra when I first moved to Ibiza, feeling every cell alive with energy, breath and the magic of being there…. wow! I get shivers just thinking about it – the nature, practicing barefoot on the earth ionises our system and releases tension profoundly. And earlier in my yogic journey, finding myself upside down in headstand without even knowing how I had got there, realising afterwards that I had been practicing from a place of no mind. This for me is the greatest flow, when we have focused our mind with total mindfulness and presence, to access this awesome state of lightness and harmony.

What do you find most rewarding about teaching?
Seeing and feeling my students awakening their potential and empowering yogis to discover how much more they are capable of – opening vast oceans of possibilities for the mind, soul and spirit to spread your wings and fly! I love to see students connect to their practice beyond the physical, to connect to their purpose, passion and your dreams. Through this your soul invites you to create more meaning through your work and creations, you consciously begin to seek to offer your life in a way that is for the greater good at all. I love to think of it as empowering people to become inner peace warriors: sending out ripples of positive energy through their families, friends, colleagues and SM networks to enhance our beautiful world. What do you find most challenging? Meeting myself. [Laughs.] Because of course, when you are working with different students, their stories often mirror your own. One of the most important professional aspects of teaching, is to come from a non-judgmental, all accepting place. So one of the greatest challenges is when students come who are mirroring something in you – something you’re working on or that you need to work on. This becomes a healing path for both of you. How do you stay grounded and connected with your philosophy as yoga becomes more and more of an image-based business? Some people say if it’s a spiritual practice, then it should be free. Now, I agree with that in essence, and when we’re practicing for ourselves, it’s free, however teachers also need to have the means to live happily and invest significantly in our ongoing trainings, so it is also important to recognise the exponential value of good yoga teaching!  Additionally, I believe it’s very important as part of the yoga journey, we’re giving back. So with Ibiza Retreats, we’re aligning with a wonderful charity www.yogamandalaproject.org that is empowering and teaching trauma sensitive yoga, to refugees in Jordan and to Palestine. We’re going be giving a certain amount of our profits this year to them and invite our guests and site visitors to become more involved and more aware. Towards the end of this year, we’re also going to invite the APNEEF carers to our retreat. As you grow as a platform, it’s important to use that as leverage to give back and spread the yogic experience.

Meet the founders – Ibiza Retreats

Larah began by connecting world-class teachers and group leaders with the island’s incredible retreat locations, therapists and chefs and when Susie Howell joined her as her partner in 2009, their offerings expanding to develop a range of their own inspiring holistic retreats. Combining yoga, meditation and tailor-made programs of treatments and therapies, Ibiza Retreats focus heavily on teaching techniques for self-healing to inspire their guests to nourish and care for themselves. Practicing what they preach is certainly part of the process for Larah and Susie, and a thorough understanding of life’s ups and downs means they connect with their guests on a deeper level. Moving into the new Ibiza Retreats HQ, Casa Lakshmi Luz, in 2016 has seen the dream come to full fruition, but the road was long and not always easy for these two beautiful and inspiring souls.

Meet Larah Davis – A holistic life and wellness coach (NCFE certified in the UK), NLP Master Practitioner, yoga teacher, yoga therapist and energy worker. When Larah’s previous relationship broke down, her partner’s business had become her world. Drowning in a negative spiral of co-dependency, smiling on the outside yet shattering inside, she was holding it all together but was stressed to the core and trapped in a painful comfort zone. Yoga, massages, meditation and time in nature were the only things keeping her sane. From Sydney to London, she had been training for four years as a Holistic Life Coach and NLP Master Practitioner and was quietly seeing clients, but when she started working with a terminally ill friend she saw a powerful transformation.

Working with dozens of complementary therapists and healers, Larah finally felt truly inspired. Whilst support-coaching at a workshop in London, the group visualised their ideal life and a vision of transformational retreats in Ibiza arose from her heart. She had already had experiences in Sydney studying energetic and spiritual healing, Life Coaching and NLP when she helped to develop a life transformations company in 2001/2002. Yet until that moment, had not felt ready to stand in her light and “serve”. “I needed to find the confidence, clarity and self-belief to break-free from the relationship and mental ‘gridlock’ of London living,” she says. “Every cell of my being was aching to retreat. Yet I couldn’t find, at that time, any retreats in Ibiza that offered the whole holistic package of coaching and wellness, yoga and meditation, integrated treatments and therapies, spiritual guidance and consciously created cuisine. There were none where I felt I would be truly nurtured as a woman, where I could rest my head, let go and release. I realised that there was a thirst for this, a market niche and a need.”

Larah felt deepy nourished within the Ibizan sisterhood. A community of women from all over the island and indeed the world who openly shared their own stories, empowering Larah to release the past, forgive her ex and most importantly heal and forgive herself. These women had gone through hardships and drawn on their inner resources to create a new life of grace, joy and gratitude. This open-hearted sisterhood continues to soothe her soul. “In a tepee at home, or high on the mountains, in workshops and retreats, we sit with women of all ages, sharing, our truths, our challenges, and our needs,” she says of her day-to-day experiences of life in Ibiza which inspire her work with Ibiza Retreats as it evolves. “Granting respect to the wiser older spirits and embracing the younger girls’ blissful innocence. And in the sharing flows acceptance, openness, courage, vulnerability, an expose of the inner-qualities that incarnate our sensitivity and our ability to honour and be the more emotional, feminine race. I am constantly inspired by the courage of each guest, to see themselves, to look into their shadow sides, face certain truths and to take up the gauntlet to create the health, happiness and success that they deserve.” Today, always looking to extend her wellness and healing capabilities, Larah is currently studying yoga therapy and is specialising in enabling her clients to self-heal anxiety, depression, recuperate from surgery and chronic back pain. And her philosophy that “women need to fill our cup first, so that we have more love and energy to give” rings true, as you find her rejuvenating her soul, from her morning practice outside under an almond tree, to the white islands’ women’s circles in yoga, meditation, kirtans, prayer and sound healing ceremonies as life allows!

Meet Susie Howell – A yoga teacher and wellness consultant who is passionate about yoga as medicine. Susie moved to Ibiza in 2010 after an intense 10-year career in advertising and a series of broken relationships saw her feeling trapped and uninspired, disconnected from her fractured sense of self and stuck in patterns of self-destruct. She had graduated at 21 and began her relationship with her yoga mat at 24, suffering from well-hidden anxiety attacks. Gaining promotion after promotion she was trapped in the cycle of wanting more, but struggling with anxiety as there wasn’t enough of her to do it all. She was functioning perfectly from the outside, but inside was merely existing. “Yoga allowed me to connect to something so much greater and more powerful, and was a space to be softer, away from the stresses of work and dysfunctional relationships. It helped me through a divorce, deaths of close friends and family, and a feeling of ‘who am I and why am I actually here?’” Time spent in the yoga studio steadily increased and in 2007 Susie undertook a yoga teacher-training course in London.

Over the course of 18 months this enabled her to break away from some of her destructive patterns, to build new friendships with inspiring people and to cultivate the strength to begin to explore what it is she was really looking for. When Susie was introduced to Larah she felt an instant connection to her passion and vision. Soon she became a partner in Ibiza Retreats, and building and evolving their shared baby has been a healing journey. “Connecting to so many wonderful people and their awe-inspiring journeys has given me the strength and courage to be authentic, to be present, and to explore beyond what is told and trained and conditioned. It has enabled the bondage of the past to be released – the guilt and the fear – and for me to use all that has been learned and shared with the brave women who come to begin or further their own journeys.”

Whether working one to one in yoga or co-creating and hosting a retreat, Susie’s passion for what she does shines through. She is fully present for you and your journey – without any judgment for the story – and helps you connect back to yourself – to what is real and authentic and to recover what has been lost along the way. “Ibiza became my place to grow, throw off the mask I had been wearing and align with my true self. Authenticity and honesty are some of the greatest freedoms – and helping people to tap into that has been a humbling journey.”