From Student to Teacher, from Teacher to Founder
Krista has taught yoga for 21 years and founded The Yoga Shala in Maitland, Florida, in 2009, a traditional space built on the daily practice of Mysore-style Ashtanga Yoga. With Level II Authorization, she is among a small number of teachers globally recognized in this lineage. Her offerings have grown to include private instruction, workshops, retreats, teacher trainings, and virtual classes, all rooted in helping people reclaim strength, function, and peace within their bodies.
In 2019, Krista suffered a traumatic nerve injury that left major muscles permanently paralyzed. What could have ended her path instead became the beginning of a new one. Using yoga, breathwork, and neurological retraining, she developed the Body Mechanics Method, a system of recovery focused on function, alignment, and resilience. Today, Krista integrates science backed recovery tools with ancient wisdom to help people live, move, and heal more intelligently. Reimagining the Shala After Recovery
Krista’s journey took a powerful new turn in 2023 when The Yoga Shala reopened its doors after the pandemic and her personal recovery. No longer just a space for traditional Mysore-style practice, the studio evolved into a more inclusive wellness hub.
At the heart of these changes was Krista’s commitment to listening: to her students, her own body, and the ever-evolving needs of the community. What began as a personal recovery became a source of innovation and service, allowing her studio to expand without losing its roots in lineage and intentional practice.
Lessons I've Learned
Being a yoga teacher and being a business owner are two different identities — and both must be nurtured. I had to learn how to run a sustainable business while staying true to the teachings.
Yoga taught me to evolve, and my business had to evolve with me. After my injury, I couldn't teach the same way, but that's how I discovered my most meaningful work. I learned that innovation and tradition can walk hand in hand.
Trust your path, adapt with life, and stay connected to your practice. It's your anchor through every challenge.
My Message to Founders
Start with what you have, where you are. Don't wait for perfect, act from purpose. Build something that reflects your values, but also learn the systems that make it sustainable.
Above all, let your personal practice guide you. It's what grounds your teaching, your business, and your resilience. And when change comes, as it always does, let your devotion help you rebuild with grace.
Business Takeaways from Start with Purpose
Build your business on what you believe in — let your mission drive your structure.
Honor the Lineage
Stay rooted in tradition, but don't be afraid to adapt your offerings for the people you serve today.
Heal and Evolve
Let your personal challenges fuel transformation — they can become your greatest assets.
Teach and Learn
Yoga teaching and business building require different skills — learn both to create lasting impact.
Anchor in Practice
Your personal practice will sustain you through every high and low — keep it sacred.
At , we don't just share inspiring stories — we break down what makes yoga businesses succeed. By learning directly from real founders and entrepreneurs, we extract actionable lessons and proven strategies you can apply, so you can avoid common mistakes, feel more confident, grow faster, and make bold choices with clarity.
Business Takeaways
- Yoga Business Journey My Yoga Business Journey: Built on Devotion, Function, and Deep Purpose
- 🔹 How Did You Set Up Your Yoga Business In the early 2000s, I was teaching yoga wherever I could — gyms, wellness centers, and small studios — while making annual trips to India to deepen my personal practice and study under the guidance of Sri K. Pattabhi Jois and later his grandson, Sharath Jois. After receiving Level II Authorization from them, Sharath told me directly: “Go home. Open a yoga shala. Teach Mysore.” That single directive lit the path forward.
- 🔹 How Did You Scale Your Yoga Business For over a decade, The Yoga Shala focused solely on teaching Ashtanga Yoga in its traditional form — Mysore-style and led classes, plus workshops, teacher trainings, and annual retreats. It was only after my nerve injury in 2019 — and the long recovery that followed — that I began to reimagine how my offerings could evolve to meet more people where they are.


