July 07, 2020 to April 26, 2039
Get this DealAppointment required, 48 hour advance notice required. Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. May redeem across visits. Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person. Valid only within 15 miles of 18966. Merchants' standard cancellation policy applies.
Trainer brings fitness to clients’ home to motivate them to reach their goals; cardio, strength, and core exercises improve tone and stamina
Choose from Three Options
- $27 for one in home personal training session ($60 value)
- $82 for three in home personal training sessions ($180 value)
- $115 for five in home personal training sessions ($300 value)
Isometrics: All You Need Is You
Your trainer may throw a few isometric movements into the fitness mix. Bulk up with knowledge via Groupon’s intro to isometrics.
Charles Atlas, the mail-order fitness king, made his famous transformation from 97-pound weakling to "The World’s Most Perfectly Developed Man" partly by standing stock-still. In his system of self-perfection, he often used moves that pitted muscle against muscle without moving the joints, which is also known as isometrics. These kinds of exercises were ideal during the Great Depression because they required little to no equipment. Press your palms together, hold a plank position, push against a wall, or flex your biceps and you’re increasing tension and placing beneficial stress on your muscle fibers even though you’re not going anywhere. You’re also not requiring much from your joints, tendons, or connective tissue, so isometrics can be an excellent way to maintain muscle even while recovering from an injury or a career as human pretzel. People with arthritis who experience pain with movement can also find them beneficial.
Because they involve holding one position, isometric exercises are tightly targeted on relatively small sections of muscle. For that reason, you probably won’t find a strength-training program that relies on isometric moves alone—in order to develop strength across your entire range of motion, you need to stress the muscle at every angle.
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