Rainbow Wave Massage: $39 for One or $115 for Three 60-Minute Hydrotherapy Massages (68% Off)

Rainbow Wave Massage

Today’s Groupon Ottawa Daily Deal of the Day: Rainbow Wave Massage: $39 for One or $115 for Three 60-Minute Hydrotherapy Massages (68% Off)

Buy now from only $
39
Value $120
Discount 68% Off
Save $81

With today’s Groupon great deal to Rainbow Wave Massage, for only $39, you can get One or $115 for Three 60-Minute Hydrotherapy Massages! That’s a saving of 68% Off! You may buy 1 voucher for yourself and 1 as gifts & the Promotional value expires 90 days after purchase.

Choose Between Two Options:

  • C$39 for one 60-minute hydrotherapy massage (C$120 value)
  • C$115 for three 60-minute hydrotherapy massages (C$360 value)

This is a limited time offer while quantities last so don’t miss out!

Click here to buy now or for more details about the deal.

In a Nutshell
Hydrotherapy soothes muscles and promotes relaxation through soothing jets of water

The Fine Print
Promotional value expires 90 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. May be repurchased every 180 days. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person. Cancellation 24 hours before appointment or a fee of 24 dollars will apply. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Rainbow Wave Massage
https://www.facebook.com/Rainbow-Wave-Massage-392646427603624/
660 Saint Isidore Road
Casselman, ON K0A 1M0

Muscular System: The Meat of the Matter
The joys of a massage or the relief of a chiropractic adjustment—and the stresses of physical work—play out partly in the muscles. Learn just what pumps the body up with Groupon’s guide to the muscular system.

The human body has more than 630 muscles keeping it upright and mobile. They make up almost half its weight and power the movements of the bones, the blood, and even the food in the stomach. Perhaps the most familiar muscles are those seen in bodybuilding contests and facial-expression contests: the skeletal, or voluntary, muscles. They’re attached to our bones and controlled by our brains, which zap them with electrical signals to cause their fibers to contract. During a muscle contraction, filaments inside the muscle fibers slide together, stacking up on one another so that the larger fiber shortens. In shortening, the fibers gain thickness—a phenomenon we notice as flexing. Whatever muscles do, they accomplish by this single pulling action. If a bicep (part of a category of muscles known as flexors) flexes to lift a barbell, it needs a tricep (an extensor), pulling in the opposite direction, to bring the arm back down.

The other two types of muscles are smooth muscles and cardiac muscles, and both are beyond our conscious control. Cardiac muscles control the beating of the heart, contracting the chambers to push blood throughout the body. But the blood doesn’t ride to the toes on that momentum alone. Lining the blood vessels are smooth muscles that help push it along. These also line the esophagus, stomach, and intestine to move food through the digestive tract, and can even help regulate the body’s temperature by opening and closing capillaries near the skin surface, all without conscious effort. The subconscious brain is also happy to turn muscles to ends beyond their apparent purpose: for instance, what we experience as shivering from cold is simply the brain causing the muscles to spasm so they will generate heat and keep your blood and any baby chicks in your coat pockets warm.

Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!