BIKRAM YOGA HAS IMPROVED SALA COSTA'S FLEXIBILITY
Bend it like Bikram
Photo gallery: Rejuvenation through yoga |
By Leanne Trapedo Sims
Special to The Advertiser
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Sala Costa is powerful in mind and body. Her hip-length hair is pulled tightly off her square jaw, and light freckles decorate her high cheekbones. Her eyes are those of an old soul, a woman who has traveled off the beaten road.
She speaks about her journey to Bikram yoga as a gift she uncovered when she was emotionally depressed and physically depleted, seven years ago. She's now 59.
"Bikram has given me the gift of 'quality of life,' " she said. "I have found a new 'ohana so many wonderful people with inspirational stories."
She was raised in Savai'i, Western Samoa, in a close-knit family of 11 siblings.
"My parents always ate healthy," she said. "My dad was Samoan and my mom half-Chinese there were always lines of people waiting to see my mom, because she knew so much about herbs."
As a young woman, she found a home in Hawai'i, starting out as a tour guide in Waikiki. In the '70s, while studying at the Church College of Hawaii in La'ie, she began performing professionally with Tihati Productions and traveled the world. "I visited every opera house in Germany even the Von Trapps' Salzburg home," she said, recalling her adventures. "It was like chicken skin."
She rubbed elbows with "Hawaii Five-O" cast as a regular extra and landed parts on "Magnum, P.I." A cultural ambassador of sorts, Sala was lead dancer for her troupe, sewing costumes and working magic with headdresses.
Today, Sala has discovered a different cultural stewardship as a flight attendant for Hawaiian Airlines. She translates for her Samoan passengers as she makes the trip back and forth to Samoa several times a week.