Winter Restore: Rituals of Warmth, Restoration & Gentle Beginnings

Winter Restore: Rituals of Warmth, Restoration & Gentle Beginnings

There is something winter asks of us that summer never does.

Summer calls us outward. Winter calls us home.

Not just to our houses, but back to ourselves.

To slower mornings. To warm cups held between cold hands. To steam rising before the sun fully wakes. To rituals that soften the nervous system and remind the body it is safe.

For many of us, the middle of the year arrives carrying exhaustion. The adrenaline of the first months wears thin. Calendars stay full. The weather cools. Our bodies begin whispering for rest long before we are ready to listen.

And yet, winter has always been a season of restoration. Not laziness. Not stopping. Restoration.

Nature has always understood this. Trees pull inward. The earth slows. Even the ocean changes rhythm.

Perhaps we were never meant to move at the same speed all year long.

At Living Koko, winter reminds us of the old ways. Of kitchens before sunrise. Of cacao prepared slowly. Of tea shared in conversation. Of the comfort found in simple rituals repeated with care.

Not because they are trendy. Because they are human.

The Ritual of Beginning Again

There is power in how we begin the day.

Before the notifications. Before the demands. Before the world asks us to become everything for everyone else.

Winter mornings invite gentler behaviours. A slower start. A deeper breath. A cup made intentionally instead of rushed.

Restoration often begins in the smallest moments. Not in dramatic transformations. But in choosing warmth. Again and again.

A warm drink. A few quiet minutes. A body nourished instead of pushed.

These small rituals become anchors. They tell the nervous system: You do not need to sprint through life to deserve rest.

Why Warmth Matters

Warmth is more than temperature.

Warmth is emotional. Cultural. Ancestral.

Warmth is the memory of someone preparing something for you with care. Warmth is sitting at a table together. Warmth is steam curling into the air while rain taps against the windows. Warmth is feeling held.

For generations across the Pacific, cacao and warm beverages have carried connection. Not simply consumption. Connection.

A pause. A gathering. A moment to settle the spirit.

Modern life teaches us speed. But ritual teaches us presence.

And presence changes everything.

Tea, Cacao & Winter Rituals

This winter, we are leaning into rituals that restore rather than deplete.

Our cacao husk teas and drinking cacao were never created to be rushed. They were created for moments like these.

For mornings where the body needs gentleness. For evenings where the mind needs softening. For people learning how to return to themselves after seasons of overgiving.

Some mornings restoration looks like:

  • Drinking tea before touching your phone
  • Standing barefoot in the early light
  • Taking three deep breaths before the day begins
  • Choosing nourishment instead of urgency
  • Letting warmth reach the body before stress does

These are not grand wellness trends. These are old human rhythms.

And perhaps winter is inviting us back to them.

Singapore, Fang Studio & the Power of Cultural Exchange

Singapore, Fang Studio & the Power of Cultural Exchange

Some journeys don’t change what you are building.
They confirm the path you’ve been walking all along.
Singapore simply reminded us we were being guided, held, and moved with alofa.

Before the expo halls, the long days, swollen feet, and endless cacao samples, we were welcomed into the beautiful space of Fang Studio by Kenny and Min — two people who didn’t simply host us, but embraced us like family.

From the moment we arrived, there was a knowing that this experience would move beyond product and into something far more human…connection, presence, and alofa.

We were also deeply grateful to have my mother, Lucia Henrietta Phoebe (Stanley) Preuss, (Etta) travelling alongside us — the matriarch of our family and one of the quiet pillars behind Living Koko. In the most exhausting moments, when the days became long and our bodies felt heavy, she kept our spirits lifted. Calm, steady, nurturing. The kind of woman who brings gentle power into every room without needing to announce it.

Through her, we were also introduced to her beautiful friend Aunty Pele Dawson, whose alofa wrapped around us throughout the entire trip. There is something sacred about being held by women who carry wisdom, softness, humour, resilience, and cultural understanding all at once.

We felt deeply grateful for the presence, guidance, and experience of such incredible women beside us.

Our time together began with cultural exchange through tea ceremony at Fang Studio. Slow movements. Quiet conversation. The kind of presence that reminds you traditions still matter in a world obsessed with rushing. We shared stories, values, practices, and philosophies from different parts of the Moana and Asia, discovering how deeply connected our cultures already are through ritual, hospitality, and community care.

The following day, we offered a cacao connection gathering for the Fang community and what unfolded was something deeply special.

Through the silent reflection in tending to our cacao – Conversations then opened. Laughter echoed through the room. Emotions surfaced gently, held by cacao, breath, and community. These are the moments that remind us cacao has always been medicine for tender togetherness long before it became a product on a shelf.

Kenny and Min continued supporting us throughout the entire week, alongside an incredible circle of people who gathered around our cacao with so much generosity and belief. They checked in on us, guided us, shared our story, introduced us to people, and quietly advocated for us in rooms we had just stepped into.

Support built through trust, reciprocity, and shared values.

Because of these connections, retailers began arriving at our expo space already knowing about Living Koko. They had heard whispers about “the Samoan cacao women,” about ceremony, about ethical sourcing, about the feeling people experienced drinking our cacao. Instead of cold introductions, we were meeting people already curious, already connected, already wanting to explore what the next step could look like together.

It reminded us that real business still happens through people, community.

Through sitting together before selling to one another.

We are deeply honoured that Fang Studio will continue sharing Living Koko cacao within their space, and we already hope to return later this year to create ceremony together again.

Some collaborations feel transactional.

This never did.

This felt like family finding family across the ocean.

Fa’afetai tele lava Singapore.
We left tired, full-hearted, and deeply grateful.

Dancing Through Grief, Breathing into Connection

Dancing Through Grief, Breathing into Connection

This past weekend, I had the honour of guiding a Breathwork, Cacao, and Pasifika Movement workshop with the extraordinary women of Pitch Face Choir. Over one hundred women gathered — hearts open, bodies ready, voices alive. We came together to breathe, to move, to reconnect with the lands and waters that have carried us.

Leading up to this, my own heart was heavy. I had just received the news that my uncle — my mum’s brother, Joe Stanley or as we called him Uncle Sale — had passed away. He was a man full of music, stories, and wisdom. An economist who travelled the Pacific, helping island nations understand their economic positions. A man who, when I was six years old, welcomed us to his home in New Caledonia with a piano, laughter, and endless songs.

He would play Tom Jones, Elvis Presley, and Engelbert Humperdinck while I twirled around him — his music filling the room with joy. I can still see his eyes lighting up as he spoke with Mum about their childhood, their years on the cacao plantations. I used to record their conversations, wanting to hold onto every story — how he’d cleverly assign the hardest weeding jobs to his brothers and sisters, keeping the easier tasks for himself, laughing as he told it. He carried so much knowledge about how their father, my papa, ran the plantations — the rhythms of business, the seasons of harvest, the value of labour and land.

When he spoke about those days, his voice softened, and his eyes shone, tears would appear. Those memories were his music too.

So as I entered the workshop space, I carried him with me. His stories. His laughter. His songs.

We began with breathwork — breathing in our intentions, breathing out our blessings for the community we moved with. The cacao grounded us, connecting us to the earth, to memory, to the unseen. Then we dedicated our movements — each woman dancing for someone or something that had supported her through life’s storms: a loved one, a river, a tree, a mountain.

As we moved, I danced for my uncle — for the piano, for the plantations, for all the stories he carried that now live in me.

We breathed, we wept, we laughed. Together, we softened into grace.
Because that’s what movement does — it brings us home to ourselves, to each other, and to those we’ve loved who now move with the wind.

For my uncle —
whose hands once touched cacao, whose songs filled our hearts,
and whose laughter still dances in the breath between worlds.

A Letter from Lolopō Phoebe

A Letter from Lolopō Phoebe

Dear Living Koko community,

This is a hard letter to write.

From the beginning, Living Koko has been about more than chocolate. It has been about honouring the lands and hands that grow our cacao, respecting the ocean that connects us, and holding fast to traditions of care, culture and community. Every bar, every cup of drinking cacao, every tea leaf has carried that story.

But today, I need to share another story—the one of what it takes to keep a small, ethical business alive in the world we’re in.

On 1 September, our prices will increase.

This decision doesn’t come lightly. For months, we’ve been absorbing the rising costs of:

  • Ethical Cacao: Prices have climbed sharply on the global market, and because we will not compromise on fair pay for our farmers, we cannot look for “cheaper” beans.

  • Sustainable Packaging: The materials we use to stay zero-waste and kind to the earth are more expensive than ever.

  • Taxes & Levies: Small businesses like ours are carrying a heavier load from new government charges.

We’ve carried these costs as long as we could, because we know how much every dollar matters in our community. But to continue offering you cacao that is vegan, ethical, zero-waste, and slave-free, we must now share that weight.

Many of you have asked us: “Why is your ceremonial grade cacao priced lower than other brands?”

The answer is simple—we are a very small team. Behind the scenes it’s literally just two of us, side by side in the factory each day, working hard to craft, pack, and send your cacao with care. It’s also this same tiny team creating our marketing, sharing our stories, and running events—with the support of our wider Koko Crew when they can step in.

Because of this, and because we source our beans directly from our farmers—our family, our community—we’ve been able to keep our prices lower. When you speak to us, you are speaking directly to those connected to the land, honouring our heritage and the people who have grown cacao for generations.

We also made a conscious choice: to keep our ceremonial grade more inclusive, accessible to a wider community who might otherwise be excluded from these deeply grounding practices.

I feel sadness in writing this, because I know price rises touch everyone. But I also feel something else—gratitude.

Gratitude that you have walked this path with us. Gratitude that you choose to support not just chocolate, but a movement. Every time you buy from Living Koko, you are investing in Pacific Island farmers, in cultural traditions, and in a way of doing business that puts people and the planet before profit.

We remain committed to transparency, to care, and to joy. And we remain here, creating with love.

Thank you for standing with us through every shift and challenge. Your support doesn’t just keep us going—it keeps this vision alive for future generations.

With love and respect,
Phoebe Preuss
Founder, Living Koko

Breathe into Balance

Breathe into Balance

Breathe Into Balance — A Moment with the Department of Social Services

Last month, Living Koko had the privilege of holding space with the Department of Social Services — a gathering not about output, performance or productivity, but about presence.

Together, we created a moment of pause. In a room full of everyday warriors, the tempo slowed. Breath deepened. Shoulders softened. The hum of urgency gave way to the steady rhythm of return — a return to body, to self, to balance.

This wasn’t just a feel-good moment. This was medicine.

We shared two intentional breathwork techniques — one to reduce stress and calm the nervous system, and another to build energy and inner vitality. These tools aren’t just useful, they’re essential. Especially for those in service-based roles who are constantly giving, often forgetting to refill their own cup.

When we breathe consciously, we:

  • Regulate our nervous system

  • Lower cortisol levels (the stress hormone)

  • Increase clarity and focus

  • Support better sleep and digestion

  • Connect to the present moment

Slowing down isn’t laziness — it’s wisdom. It’s a radical act of self-respect in a world that glorifies hustle. And in those moments of stillness, we don’t just “rest”… we restore.

Through this breath-led experience, we saw masks fall away, even just briefly. The tension in faces gave way to lightness. Minds that had been running finally paused. There was no pressure to solve the world’s problems. Just the invitation to be— wholly and gently.

This is what it means to breathe into balance.
To honour the vessel carrying us through story, service, and everything in between.

To the beautiful humans of DSS — thank you for showing up with openness and grace. Your presence made the space sacred.
And to Penelope Fogarty — thank you for the invitation to share in this moment of slow magic.

With heart and breath,
The Living Koko Team

Breathwork Cacao Ceremony
Breathwork Cacao Ceremony

Culture in Motion: How Dance, Cacao, and Indigenous Wisdom Shape Living Koko

Culture in Motion: How Dance, Cacao, and Indigenous Wisdom Shape Living Koko

When I dance, I am not performing. I am remembering.

Each step, each hand movement, each sway of the hips carries with it generations of knowledge. Polynesian dance is not entertainment—it is archive. It is ceremony. It is how we record, embody, and pass on what matters: the stories of land, people, our values.

And just as my body remembers through dance, my hands remember through cacao. The smell of the roasted beans, the feel of the granite grinder, the slow tempering of chocolate—these are not tasks. They are rituals. And every ritual is a reminder: I am the bridge between my ancestors and the world we are shaping today.

Dance as Cultural Intelligence

In Western systems, intelligence is often measured by what you can extract, produce, or control. But in our systems, intelligence is shown by how you carry—how you carry stories, responsibilities, and relationships.

Polynesian dance teaches this from the first lesson. It is not just about movement—it is about presence. You learn timing, restraint, generosity, coordination with others. You learn to listen with more than your ears.

In the workplace, these same skills show up. In leading teams, reading the room, creating experiences with rhythm and grace. In holding space for complexity without rushing to conquer it.

Dance taught me to lead with my whole self—not just my brain, but my breath, my gut, my lineage.

Cacao as Ceremony, Not Commodity

We come from a lineage that has worked with cacao for over 200 years (documented). My family grew up around plantations in Samoa, where cacao was part of the landscape and the language.

Today, at Living Koko, we don’t just make chocolate. We practice relationship. Every bean we source is part of a bigger story—of land regeneration, women’s economic empowerment, intergenerational healing.

When I make cacao, I’m not manufacturing a product—I’m remembering the sacredness of what it means to nourish. To create with integrity. To offer something that carries MANA.

This is how I know that Indigenous systems belong here. Because when we root our processes in care, rhythm, and accountability, we don’t just make better products—we make a better world.

Bringing Cultural Systems into Business

Many businesses talk about innovation. But too often, they miss the wisdom that has already been innovated over millennia by Indigenous communities.

At Living Koko, we embed our values in every layer:

  • We honour slow growth, not rushed expansion.

  • We work with zero waste and circular systems.

  • We centre community wealth, not just profit margins.

  • We honour rituals, meetings with intention, and product launches as ceremony.

We don’t separate culture from business. Culture is the business model.

When we treat the market as a place for cultural exchange—not just economic transaction—we change everything. We trade in trust. We build legacy. We remember that we are not owners of the land but part of it.

Lolopō Fipe Preuss x