Description
- TAKE IT WITH YOU ACROSS TOWN OR WHEREVER YOU WANT TO GO. The Gravity Pal Traveler is the ONLY PORTABLE Low Angle Inversion Table (Slanting Table aka Old Style Slant Board) on Market Today. Solid Support, Beautiful & Lightweight.
- SAVE TIME. Results in 1 to 3 Minutes. Regular Daily Users Report Cumulative Wellness Benefits as Part of a Healthy Lifestyle.
- BACK PAIN RELIEF. Natural Spine Alignment, Improved Circulation, Faster Exercise Recovery and 1-Minute Energy & Brain Boost.
- RECOMMENDED OPTIONAL TRAVEL CASE **Sold Separately** SEE Amazon ASIN: B01IIWXKN0
- MADE IN USA. Hand made by Amish Craftsmen and Women in Iowa. Comes Fully Assembled. Exclusively by Gravity Pal. FREE eBOOK BONUS w/ purchase: The Inversion Revolution – Soft Cover & Kindle also available on Amazon
emmapeel –
This thing is fantastic. It isn’t cheap, but as with most consumer items, you get what you pay for. This table is very well engineered and constructed, and I’m sure it will last forever. It’s ridiculously easy to set up (absolutely no assembly involved from the get-go) and fold up when I’m done. The low angle is perfect; I can feel my spine decompressing without too much blood rushing to my head as would happen on other types of steeper-angle inversion tables.
We have a small apartment, so I’m eternally grateful to have found something to relieve my spinal stenosis that I can actually use in here. It’s so small that it just sits in a corner, completely flat.
DJLP –
I have had this for several years now, and can’t speak enough about it. It is so much better than the one you hang upside down with. I have mild scoliosis with an old compression fracture that healed funny. As I’m aging that little bugger has been a nuisance but with Gravity Pal and daily stretches from PT, I have no problems.
I’ve also notice I can think clearer after ‘resting’ on it for a bit.
Thank you so much for this. I found it from a recommendation from a young lady on YT that lives like she is in the 50’s. It has been perfect for us, and it folds up very easy.
Silver Oak –
This slant board might be the fountain of youth. My mom bought a slant board back in the 60’s. She is alive at age 95 with beautiful skin and in good health. Movie stars and models swore by these back then as preservers of their beauty.
Inversion is very good for all systems and organs in the body, to give a rest from the effects of gravity. I decided to buy an inversion board/slant board for my health. I searched for a long time, and I think this company, Gravity Pal, is the only company in the world that makes this type of slant board these days.
This board is extremely sturdy. The pad has a nice texture so I don’t slip off of it. It comes fully assembled, and it is very sleek and folds and unfolds very smoothly and easily, in one quick move.
It is very comfortable to lay on. I settle myself on the board, head down and feet up, and I listen to relaxing music. It feels great. I am very happy with the quality.
Communication with the seller was excellent, as well. I asked a question before I purchased it, and he answered immediately. I am very happy with this purchase, and I recommend this company.
PRIDDY –
I had a slant board for 17 years that I used almost daily until the padding wore out. The elevation on that was 12″. I feel like the benefits were equal, but much more comfortable to get on and off of. I am keeping this one because my husband and I searched everywhere and could not find anything else. Probably more appropriate for a man.
Fred Baker –
Thanks to a surgeon who refused to repair my inguinal hernia because he was terrified of my massively swollen lymph nodes (he was convinced I had Hodgkins lymphoma, which is NOT the case), I purchased the Gravity Pal without a bit of buyer’s remorse. The idea was that I could, as needed, lie down at a tilt and jiggle the errant bit of gut back up through the gap in my abdominal muscles, thus further postponing the surgery I’d already put off for 51 years. (No, that’s not a typo.)
And it worked.
The low angle inversion table is doing its job. The hardcore versions where you hang upside down like a slab of beef never did work for me. I always felt like I was being attacked and wound up waiting for my feet to fall off, dropping me on my head. Not a pleasant experience. The Gravity pal is less traumatic. When I first lie down on the thing, sure, my saggy 74 year old facial skin rolls up over the lower portion of my eyes, my lower back hurts, and that’s after having used the table at least twice daily for several weeks. But after a few minutes, the back pain is gone and the biggest challenge is trying not to fall asleep because I snore in that position.
Overall, I do feel better since starting this protocol. Being a bit of an extremist in such matters and often willing to ignore good suggestions, I started out at twenty minutes per session, three sessions per day, later reducing the regimen to twice a day at ten minutes per lie-down. That seems to be the sweet spot for me. Most of the time, the table sits folded up beside a recliner in the living room, but it does go along with us during our every-other-month trips from western Montana to southern Arizona and back. We did not buy a travel case but simply kept the cardboard shipping box to protect the Gravity Pal en route. The unit is sturdy, the construction is well done with legs that stand strong and fold easily, and I expect to be using this same table twenty years from now.
Aaron N. Hoorwitz –
As a long-time user of traditional inversion tables with which I usually hung completely upside down, I was intrigued to see this invention because I am now living in a smaller place with no room for an inversion table and I could see that this product was light and small enough to easily fold and put away. I also knew from my experience with inversion tables that a mild angle is just as therapeutic as a steeper angle. So it was worth a gamble even though it would cost more than I’d ever spent on any of the inversion tables that I have owned. And the gamble paid off. I am delighted to have found this. Compliments to the creative inventor of what looks like a simple decline-bench for lifting weights.