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Stress less with Pulsetto—use our exclusive code to save on wearable tech

Stress less with Pulsetto—use our exclusive code to save on wearable tech

Feeling stressed? You're not alone—stress is a common part of life. Fortunately, technology offers solutions to help us manage it. Pulsetto's innovative wearable technology stimulates your vagus nerve, promoting relaxation and helping you unwind and relax.
Pulsetto has vagus nerve stimulation down to a science. You can lower stress, enhance your focus, have a brighter mood, get better sleep and lower your blood pressure all with one wearable device. The Pulsetto Mental Health Awareness Month sale is running right now, offering their device for $200 off through the end of May, but you can get an additional 10% off when you use our exclusive promo code USATODAY at checkout.
Related: This heated zero-gravity massage chair is $4,500 off ahead of Memorial Day
The Pulsetto is a non-invasive, vagus nerve stimulator in a wearable technology form that fits around your neck. The entire kit comes with the Pulsetto nerve stimulator, a device charging cable, a user manual, access to the Pulsetto app and electrode gel for optimal skin contact.
Originally $469, the Pulsetto device is on sale for $269 and you can use our exclusive code USATODAY to save an extra 10% and ring up at $242 before taxes.
The Pulsetto app syncs to your device and provides five programs to help combat stress, anxiety and more. Pulsetto Premium gives you access to three different kinds of stimulations, 11 guided meditations, 54 breathing exercises and over 1,200 positive affirmations. The goal is help you relax, unwind and de-stress beyond the benefits of just meditating.
Both the free and premium plan offer a range of features to help you on your wellness journey.
The vagus nerve is your longest cranial nerve, connecting your brain to several of your internal organs, including your heart, lungs and digestive system. The word vagus is Latin for wandering. It was given this name because it looks like it's wandering throughout the body, since it is so thoroughly spread out.
Your vagus nerve is responsible for signaling the brain to activate your relaxation response by releasing calming neurotransmitters like serotonin. Vagnus nerve stimulation (VNS) works by delivering electrical impulses to the nerve. Thanks to the Pulsetto's technology, the stimulation process no longer requires needles or surgery, but is non-invasive, wearable technology. Stimulating the vagus nerve helps to aid in relaxation, which means it is helping to inhibit the stress response in your body, lowering blood pressure and reducing inflammation.
A majority of Pulsetto customers feel the difference in a matter of days or week, depending on their health factors.
Shop Pulsetto's wearable tech
Yes! You can try the Pulsetto device risk-free for 21 days. If you don't love the results, you can return the device for a full refund. Additionally, every Pulsetto comes with a two-year warranty and you have the option of doubling the warranty to four years.
Mental Health Awareness Month is observed every May to raise awareness about mental health issues, reduce stigma and promote mental wellness.
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This transcript was automatically generated, and then edited for clarity in its current form. There may be some differences between the audio and the text. Podcasts: True crime, in-depth interviews and more USA TODAY podcasts right here Taylor Wilson: Good morning. I'm Taylor Wilson, and today is Tuesday, July 29th, 2025. This is USA TODAY's The Excerpt. Today, the latest from Gaza amid severe hunger worries, plus breaking down Trump's comments about Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell this week, and what's at stake in a slew of upcoming governor races? ♦ For the second day running yesterday, Israel paused its military operations in Gaza to improve the humanitarian response. That follows a series of alarming warnings from world leaders and global officials from the United Nations World Health Organization and from dozens of humanitarian agencies that malnutrition and even starvation in Gaza are on a dangerous trajectory. 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There are some issues the Republicans are having, but that's still one of the early gubernatorial races that we're going to be looking at. She's going to be running against Democratic Representative Abigail Spanberger, who I think in a recent July 16th poll by the Virginia Commonwealth University showed Earle-Sears, the Republican trailing Spanberger by about 12 points. There are other polls that have this a little bit closer, but I think when you look at all of these gubernatorial races, governors are at the forefront of policy decisions. Think of during the COVID-19 crisis, the critical role that governors play. Nationally speaking, Virginia's home to about 152,000 federal workers, Taylor, so right next door to D.C. where the Trump administration laid off untold amounts of federal workers. Right now, it just seems like Republicans are just trying to keep their head above water in this race. It's looked at as more of a democratic pickup, but it's one that Republicans certainly aren't going to stop fighting for. But those internal campaign problems for Earle-Sears is something that cannot be overlooked and that may hamper our candidacy and get Republicans shifting elsewhere. Taylor Wilson: Well, shifting to next year, we have a bunch of swing state governor elections. What role might President Trump play here and what's at stake? Phillip M. Bailey: Well, look, I think the president's role is going to be outsized in most of these elections, either for or against. You're going to see Democrats, I mean some who've already announced their candidacies, like in Wisconsin, for example, already calling him a maniac and calling out his agenda, talking about the immigration crackdown. So a lot of places Republicans are going to be on defense. But look, any MAGA folks will tell you, any Republicans will tell you that having the White House is always better than not. The president's shadow is going to loom in some of these races, particularly these swing state races. When we look at some of these gubernatorial races, and 38 in total, the more premier ones, the more competitive ones are going to be in your swing states like Nevada, like Georgia, like Arizona. So the president who won all of those swing states last year in the 2024 presidential election, he's confident. He was speaking to the Republican Governors Association earlier this year, and he said he looks forward to working with these governors. They've made a lot of progress. So I expect that some of these states that you could see President Trump arrive, but it all depends, I think, on his polling numbers there as we see President Trump's polling numbers begin to dip, as we've seen Trump, some of his more controversial maneuvers, particularly around immigration, particularly around the treatment of college or universities and other areas that could be the first signs of a backlash. We usually measure that in these congressional midterms, but these gubernatorial races with these chief executives, that's going to be critical of some of these issues in the president's role, and his impact and his popularity in those states is really going to come down to the why in a lot of these toss-up elections. Taylor Wilson: Well, I found this interesting, Phillip, that you feature former Vice President Kamala Harris in this piece. Is she considering a run for governor in California? What do we know about that race as of now? Phillip M. Bailey: When we talk about these 2026 gubernatorial elections, when we talk about New Jersey and Virginia are going to be the first test this year, we talk about some of these more competitive ones in swing states, but one feature of these gubernatorial contests is going to be the presidential campaign of 2028, and one of those ideas is that maybe Kamala Harris will make a return to the national stage. She has talked openly about, hey, she's considering running for governor in her home state of California. If she were to do that, polls show that she will be automatically one of the more popular, the lead candidate, really, in that race. So I think being in charge of the fourth-largest economy in the world certainly is nothing to bat your eyes at, but there's a question of does Harris have her mind on running for president for a third time, which I think a lot of donors and Democrats might have some misgivings about, or going back to California and perhaps having a confrontation with Trump there. Remember Gavin Newsom, the current governor of California, who was also term limited, he's not running for reelection, but he's already had some major clashes with Donald Trump over immigration. We saw some serious clashes, some violent clashes in the streets between ICE agents and federal officials and law enforcement and pro-immigration demonstrators who were opposing the Trump administration. So if Harris does make this announcement, it will automatically just put her on a collision course with Donald Trump and return her to the national stage. It doesn't forbid her from running for president in 2028. It's a bit difficult, I guess, to have those back-to-back campaigns, but her return to the national stage will certainly be a feature of the 2026 campaign. Taylor Wilson: All right, Phillip M. Bailey is USA TODAY's Chief Political Correspondent. Thanks, Phillip. Phillip M. Bailey: Thanks Taylor, as always. ♦ Taylor Wilson: Thanks for listening to The Excerpt. You can get the podcast wherever you get your audio, and as always, you can email us at podcasts@ I'm Taylor Wilson. I'll be back tomorrow with more of The Excerpt from USA TODAY.

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