A sore back can make everyday tasks harder, from crawling out of bed in the morning to sewing yourself into the bed at night. Add relaxation to your routine with this Groupon.
Choose from Three Options
- $45 for a one-hour massage and a 15-minute foot scrub and massage with paraffin treatment (a $115 value)
- $49 for a one-hour massage and a 30-minute facial with mask (a $154 value)
- $89 for a one-hour massage and a one-hour microdermabrasion with facial massage and LED light therapy (a $279 value)
Choose between traditional, Swedish, Japanese shiatsu, deep-tissue, hot-stone, herbal-ball, aromatherapy, or Thai combination massages. The paraffin treatment softens the skin on the feet after exfoliation. Microdermabrasion uses ultrafine crystals to slough away dull upper layers of skin to diminish fine lines and sun damage.
Bahn Sabai
The stresses and anxieties of the outside world dissipate at the hands of Bahn Sabai’s massage therapists and aestheticians, who usher patrons into a stress-free oasis and set their minds at ease with a list of rejuvenating spa services. Hard walls of tension crumble under the influence of the therapists’ signature massages, which range from the botanically based relaxation of herbal ball and aromatherapy techniques to the focused finger pressures of Japanese shiatsu. Customized massages take the spa experience one step further, blending various modalities to accommodate the unique contours of your muscles and wind-up keyhole.
To keep countenances in enviable form, Bahn Sabai's aestheticians use microdermabrasion, which scares off dead skin cells, scarring, and age spots with ultra-fine crystals and menacing thunderclaps. When dealing with fine lines and other facial fissures, they harness the noninvasive light energy of LED light therapy to stimulate collagen production and enhance circulation.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Logic Puzzles
Challenging the brain keeps it from turning into a soft, spreadable gel that looks delicious but will give you canker sores. Keep your brain firm and supple by exercising it with these logic puzzles:
• A man takes 10 flights of stairs to work every day but only has to walk down 9 flights of stairs to get home. How is this possible? (Answer: He takes 10 flights of stairs to work … in his backpack—they're small! He just walks up and down 9 flights of stairs to get to his office and back.)
• You're planning a dinner party for six people. Horace won't sit next to Patricia because of her political views, but he has to sit next to Alice because they're practically married. Nina and Catherine have to sit across from each other because they both love to laugh. Phillip will bring his own chair, which can't be near anyone because he has a leg condition. What is your seating plan? (Answer: Why do you always invite Phillip?)
• A father wants his three sons to inherit a glass figurine, a candle, and two pewter oranges. The eldest son has already been promised the candle. How should the father split up the rest of his estate so that it is fair? (Answer: The youngest son gets the figurine and the pewter oranges. Middle children inherit nothing in the culture where this takes place.)
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