Divine Health Studio: $69 for Three or $105 for Six Personal-Training Sessions (Up to 71% Off)
Today’s Groupon Edmonton Daily Deal of the Day: Divine Health Studio: $69 for Three or $105 for Six Personal-Training Sessions (Up to 71% Off)
Buy now from only $
69
Value $180
Discount Up to 71% Off
Save $111
Personal trainers push people to do more, whether it’s doing one more set of bench presses or eating one more box of protein bars. Go the extra mile with this Groupon.
Choose Between Two Options:
- $69 for three personal-training sessions ($180 value)
- $105 for six personal-training sessions ($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
Personal trainers work one-on-one with clients to carve out custom workout plans and ensure proper form
The Fine Print
Expires 90 days after purchase. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Valid only for option purchased. Appointments required. Full offer must be utilized within 90 days of initial visit Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.
Divine Health Studio
http://www.divinehealth.ca/
35A Rayborn Crescent
St. Albert, Alberta T8N 4A9
780-418-2164
Muscle Confusion: An Undulating Path to Strength Gains
Learn the secret to overcoming fitness plateaus with Groupon’s guide to muscle confusion.
Study muscle growth in any depth and you might easily reach this conclusion: muscles are kind of lazy. When you work out, your muscles go through an adaption period, growing so that they can handle the extra stress being put on them. But when they’re exposed to the same amount of stress or intensity all the time, they get used to it and promptly stop making gains. To overcome this plateau and destroy muscles’ attitude of smug complacency, trainers might prescribe a program of muscle confusion. That means strategically mixing up the order of workouts, the amount of resistance, length of rest periods, intensity, or other factors so no muscle group gets too familiar with the move.
Charles Poliquin, an athletic trainer who has designed workouts for 17 Olympic sports and for professional sports teams, is most often credited with introducing the concept physiologically known as undulating or nonlinear periodization in 1988. “Nonlinear” refers to the constant fluctuation in workout intensity (as opposed to progressing methodically through higher weight loads, for instance), and “periodization” refers to a specific plan for cycling through workout changes in order to give all the muscles enough attention.
Some studies have found muscle confusion, as it’s now commonly called, to be more effective in promoting long-term fitness and in boosting performance levels, and popular workout systems such as P90X and Insanity plan their intense regimens according to these principles. But if you prefer the comfort of a predictable routine, other experts are on hand to back you up, noting that if you’re focusing on a specific muscle group it may take weeks to get all you can out of a given move.
Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!