StarCare Health Centre: $29 for One 60- or $39 for One 90-Minute Deep-Tissue or Reflexology Massage (Up to 68% Off)

StarCare Health Centre

Today’s Groupon Toronto Daily Deal of the Day: StarCare Health Centre: $29 for One 60- or $39 for One 90-Minute Deep-Tissue or Reflexology Massage (Up to 68% Off)

Buy now for only $
29
Value $80
Discount 64% Off
Save $51

With today’s Groupon great deal to StarCare Health Centre, for only $29, you can get One 60- or $39 for One 90-Minute Deep-Tissue or Reflexology Massage! That’s a saving of 64% Off! You may buy 1 vouchers for yourself and 1 as gifts & the Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase.

Choose Between Two Options:

  • C$29 for one 60-minute deep-tissue or reflexology massage (C$80 value)
  • C$39 for one 90-minute deep-tissue or reflexology massage (C$120 value)

This is a limited 2-day only sale that will expire at midnight on Friday September 11, 2015.

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

In a Nutshell
Licensed therapists help reduce stress and relax clients with deep-tissue massage or reflexology that applies pressure to hands and feet

The Fine Print
Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. Appointment required. Merchant’s standard cancellation policy applies (any fees not to exceed Groupon price). Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. 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.

StarCare Health Centre
http://www.starcarehealth.ca/
80 Acadia Avenue
Unit 104, Room 2
Markham, ON L3R 9V1
+16478089539

Reflexology: Tracking Energy from Head to Toe
Though reflexology shares much in common with acupuncture, it has its own unique properties and origins. Read on to learn more about the practice.

In the early 20th century, you might have been able to identify patients coming from a reflexology appointment by the clothespins on their fingertips. Today’s reflexologists generally carry out their treatments by hand in a wellness clinic or a massage studio, but the principle remains the same: apply pressure to specific points on the hands, feet, or ears, prompting responses in organs throughout the body.

Similar to acupuncture and acupressure, the practice posits that energy pathways run throughout the body. Reflexology’s system, however, is a bit simpler than Chinese medicine’s complex map of meridians. Envision vertical lines running from each toe up through the leg, joining lines running from each finger up the arm toward the neck and coming together in the head, and you have the body divided into 10 attractively slimming reflexology zones. Within each zone on the palm or—most common in reflexology sessions today—the sole, certain pressure points are thought to correspond to organs, joints, or other tissues elsewhere in the same zone.

Dr. William Fitzgerald—originator of the clothespin technique—began practicing what he called “zone therapy” in 1915. While research has yet to find a concrete link between modern medical thought and the millennia-old idea of imperceptible bodily energy, that doesn’t mean reflexology can’t be relaxing. Patients can expect the benefits of a treatment to include at least those of a good foot massage: increased circulation, relieved muscle tension, and decreased stress and susceptibility to tickle attacks. Even early proponents of the technique accepted that results might vary from person to person. Writing in 1928, physician Bernard Lust was content with claiming that “the adoption of the method is attended with absolutely no danger or disagreeable results, and may be the means of lengthening short lives and making good health catching.”

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