HOT DEAL: Yoga Central – $39 for 10 or $69 for 20 Yoga Classes (Up to 70% Off)

Yoga Central

Today’s Groupon Edmonton Daily Deal of the Day: Yoga Central – $39 for 10 or $69 for 20 Yoga Classes (Up to 70% Off)

Buy now from only $
39
Value $130
Discount 70% Off
Save $91

Groupon is featuring a great deal to Yoga Central today. For only $39, you’ll get 10 or $69 for 20 Yoga Classes! That’s a saving of 70% Off! You may buy 1 vouchers for yourself and 2 as gifts & the vouchers Expires 90 days after purchase. Not valid for clients active within the past 12 months.

Choose Between Two Options:

  • $39 for 10 yoga classes ($130 value)
  • $69 for 20 yoga classes ($220 value)

Instructors offer 10 varieties of traditional yoga styles, including hatha and vinyasa, as well as 4 different types of hot yoga. See the schedule.

Exercising, whether jogging or making your way through a tapestry of yoga poses, can be a little tough when you start out. Take inspiration during your next workout by understanding the good it’s doing inside with Groupon’s whirlwind tour of the cardiovascular system.

This is a limited 4-day only sale that will expire at midnight on Thursday, April 3, 2014.

Click here to buy now or for more info about the deal. Quantities are limited so don’t miss out!

In a Nutshell
Yogis lead traditional, hot, and warm yoga classes, helping clients improve overall fitness and enhance the mind-body connection

The Fine Print
Expires 90 days after purchase. Not valid for clients active within the past 12 months. Must sign waiver. Must activate by expiration date on voucher; membership expires 120 days from activation date. Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Yoga Central
http://www.yogacentral.ca/
5124 – 122 St., Suite 104
Edmonton, Alberta T6H 3S3
780-439-0014

The average person’s heart beats 100,000 times a day, pushing 10 pints of blood all the way to the tips of the toes and back through 60,000 miles of vessels. Along this route, that blood stops to do a great many errands. The heart pumps blood to the lungs to collect oxygen before sending it through the rest of the body via arteries, arterioles, and capillaries. Once the tissues have absorbed the oxygen and nutrients they need, they send the waste-filled blood back to the heart through the veins to be reoxygenated and start the process again.

Every time our heart beats, what we really feel is the opening and closing of valves that push the blood through the heart’s four chambers and out to the body. When we exercise or get scared by a shrub that looked like a huge dog for a second, our brains instruct the heart to beat harder to supply the body with what it needs to fight or run. As exercise enhances the muscles over time, it also improves the function of the entire cardiovascular system.

This happens in several ways. Although exercise makes the heart work harder in the short term, this ultimately causes the body to adapt, easing the heart’s everyday tasks. In response to muscles’ demand for more oxygen and compliments, the body actually sprouts new capillaries, while prompting existing capillaries to open wider. These increased channels help lower blood pressure, since blood now encounters less resistance on its way to the extremities. The heart also becomes better at oxygenating the tissues—red blood cells increase their numbers during intense exercise.

With its insistent knocking in our ribcage, you may think the heart’s role in all this would be hard to ignore. But the earliest anatomists didn’t hear its call so clearly. Galen and Hippocrates believed the liver produced blood and spread it through the body in a centrifugal manner; meanwhile, the veins contained air, which the lungs pushed to the tissues. They also assumed this was an open-ended system, with the blood and air gradually dissipating when it reached the ends of veins and arteries—a view that would hold for another 1,500 years.

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