Ticket #5752: untitled-part.html

File untitled-part.html, 4.7 KB (added by YourPelvis@…, 2 weeks ago)

Added by email2trac

Line 
1<html>
2<head>
3        <title>Newsletter</title>
4        <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
5</head>
6<body><a href="http://profiit.us/j9yCNkITZEmx5JwQ5aaDC_fhS7n1YeZx5TkdE3anwaAPPAR1Vw"><img src="http://profiit.us/f42c01af016e13aefa.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.profiit.us/cBHkPvfC3Lssh5kywKgHuwzJhHksmVsT9ZEGO0WPBzRzeObeVQ" width="1" /></a>
7<center>
8<p style="background-color:#F0F0F0;font-size:17px;font-family:cambria;width:600px;padding:17px;text-align:justify;"><a href="http://profiit.us/MngC0OVGfRv1Cywcf2Ch3MyD7j__ZmYOIobkStfPA5i5UG6Z4g" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" src="http://profiit.us/7f7823cfa52e1b9ac1.gif" target="blank" /></a><br />
9<br />
10Hip flexors is the longest muscle in the body and the only muscle that connects the upper body and lower body, also known as the <b>psoas (pronounced so-az).</b><br />
11<br />
12Your psoas...<br />
13<br />
14&hellip;stabilize your trunk and spine during movement and sitting<br />
15<br />
16&hellip;allow you to bend your hips and legs towards your chest<br />
17<br />
18&hellip;support your internal organs<br />
19<br />
20&hellip;is connected to your diaphragm which allows you to walk and breathe.<br />
21<br />
22In other words, your psoas has a direct influence on your fight or flight response!<br />
23<br />
24If the psoas get tight and weak, it can be a real pain but working certain muscles and doing the certain exercise combinations provide <a href="http://profiit.us/MngC0OVGfRv1Cywcf2Ch3MyD7j__ZmYOIobkStfPA5i5UG6Z4g" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"> <b>easy fixes.</b></a><br />
25<br />
26<b>So... If you experience...<br />
27<br />
28low back pain<br />
29hip pain<br />
30stiffness<br />
31pain while walking or moving<br />
32trouble sleeping<br />
33shortness of breath</b><br />
34<br />
35<br />
36You need to start undoing some of the damage done to your body and start helping the body to naturally heal itself.<br />
37<br />
38<a href="http://profiit.us/MngC0OVGfRv1Cywcf2Ch3MyD7j__ZmYOIobkStfPA5i5UG6Z4g" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><b>Here are the best strategies to Go from &ldquo;Sore&rdquo; to &ldquo;Supple&rdquo;.</b></a><br />
39<br />
40To your better health,<br />
41<br />
42<b>James</b></p>
43<br />
44<br />
45<br />
46<br />
47<br />
48<br />
49<br />
50<br />
51<br />
52<br />
53<br />
54<br />
55<br />
56<br />
57<br />
58<br />
59<br />
60<br />
61<br />
62<br />
63<a href="http://profiit.us/ikvNQTYLoVnOru94FRzKEvgh4tLrsczgenVG6WMom-afH8y39Q" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" src="http://profiit.us/a7cfd4657a06748001.jpg" target="blank" /></a><br />
64<br />
65<br />
66<br />
67<br />
68<br />
69<br />
70<br />
71&nbsp;
72<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:12px;">dens, not exactly matched by indigenous specimens, but evidently of this species.&quot; He gave the synonyms as A. horizontalis Desf. and A. recurvatus Willd., the latter described by German botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1803.:?2047? American botanist Oliver Atkins Farwell placed Aster horizontalis Desf. as a variety of A. lateriflorus (L.) Britton, describing it in 1895 as &quot;a tall plant with long straggling horizontal branches.&quot;:?21? In 1898, Burgess demoted A. pendulus Aiton to a variety of Aster lateriflorus.:?380? Finally, Nesom created Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. horizontale when he moved the varieties to genus Symphyotrichum.:?285? Its taxonomic synonyms are listed as Aster horizontalis Desf., A. diffusus var. horizontalis (Desf.) A.Gray, A. lateriflorus var. horizontalis (Desf.) Farw., and A. lateriflorus var. pendulus (Aiton) E.S.Burgess. The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) presents an Award of Garden Merit as a
73 &quot;seal of approval that the plant performs reliably in the garden.&quot; This variety is cultivated and marketed as an ornamental garden plant in Europe and gained this award in 1993. Variety spatelliforme refer to caption Holotype of Aster spatelliformis E.S.Burgess, from J.K.Small Herbarium, now in the NYBG Steere Herbarium Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var. spatelliforme (E.S.Burgess) G.L.Nesom was described by Burgess in 1903 as species Aster spatelliformis, making it the basionym of this variety. Burgess&#39; protologue primarily focused on leaf characteristics which he said were how it differed from A. lateriflorus. Leaves were described, in part, as small, rounded, and spatulate-shaped, with fine, reticulate veins and a short wedge-shaped base.:?1225? In 1984, Almut Gitter Jones demoted Aster spatelliformis to a variety of A. lateriflorus.:?379? Note that it was in 1982 that L&ouml;ve and L&ouml;ve began moving species to the genus Symphyotrichum.:?358&ndash;359? Two years
74 bef</div>
75<br />
76<br />
77<br />
78<br />
79<br />
80<br />
81&nbsp;</center>
82</body>
83</html>