Background
I’ve read and watched videos about inversion tables. I’ve known they existed for quite a few years, but lacked interest in sacrificing the bedroom/spare room real estate for such a thing. As I recall, they’re designed to alleviate the pressure that gravity causes your own body mass to exert on your frame, specifically the discs in your spine. By inverting oneself, you effectively reduce or altogether eliminate that pressure by reversing it. Impressive idea.
In the recent past I started looking into these things, not because I’m suffering from back pain, but to try and take advantage of what appears to be a healing tool, or concept. I wasn’t overly enthusiastic about it, but did take it as far as making a special trip to Play It Again Sports just to try one out. I was only in it for 60 seconds, tops, but dared to go full vertical and really enjoyed the experience.
Present
Today, my wife admitted she found an inversion table on Craig’s List and made plans to surprise me with it when I got home. There was a problem: the table wouldn’t fit in her car. She had to tell me about it, so that I could take my car to get it. Fortunately, I had just the right amount of cash to offer in exchange. The seller claimed to have purchased it to relieve lower back pain.
I loaded the STAMINA Gravity Inversion Therapy Table in the car and headed home. A few hours later I brought it inside and we set it up. There’s only minor setup required, no tools, and it collapses to take up minimal space for storage. I got in it and quickly realized this particular model doesn’t go full vertical, in fact I’d have to say it stops at roughly 70 degrees, give or take. No worries. It is ill-advised to get in them for very long, or very ‘far’ at first. You’re supposed to gradually ease into the duration and angle over time.
My wife jumped in and gave it a whirl for herself; she too enjoyed it.
I intend to do more research and add the inversion table to my daily fitness routine. I’ll post more about my experience later.

