The Truth About Pelvic Floor Exercises: Separating Fact from Fiction

The Truth About Pelvic Floor Exercises reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

Pelvic floor exercises—especially Kegels—are everywhere. From fitness influencers and postpartum programs to smartphone apps and magazine articles, you’ve likely been told that squeezing your pelvic floor muscles a few times a day will “fix” leaks, pressure, or discomfort. But here’s the truth: while pelvic floor exercises can be powerful, they’re not one-size-fits-all—and not all the advice out there is grounded in science.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we specialize in full-body pelvic health physiotherapy, helping women across Canada understand how their pelvic floor fits into a much bigger picture of core stability, posture, and movement. This blog breaks down the most common misconceptions about pelvic floor exercises and replaces them with the facts you need for effective, lasting recovery.

Fiction #1: Kegels Are the Ultimate Solution to Pelvic Floor Issues

Fact:

Kegels can be helpful for some women—but not all. In cases of pelvic floor tightness or overactivity, doing repeated contractions without first learning how to release the muscles can worsen symptoms like urgency, pain, or pressure.

What You Need Instead:

A proper assessment to determine whether your pelvic floor needs strengthening, downtraining, coordination retraining, or a mix of all three.

Fiction #2: You Should Be Doing Hundreds of Pelvic Floor Squeezes a Day

Fact:

More isn’t always better. Muscle endurance is important, but quality and coordination matter more than quantity. Randomly squeezing your pelvic floor without addressing breathing, posture, or core timing won’t deliver functional strength.

What You Need Instead:

Targeted, progressive exercises tailored to your specific needs. At YFS, we coach clients through breathing-integrated pelvic floor movements that mimic real-life demands.

Fiction #3: If You Don’t Have Incontinence, You Don’t Need Pelvic Floor Exercises

Fact:

The pelvic floor supports more than just bladder function. It stabilizes your spine, supports your organs, assists with bowel movements, and contributes to sexual health. Women with pelvic pain, constipation, prolapse, or postural issues can all benefit from the right pelvic floor training.

What You Need Instead:

A holistic approach that treats your pelvic floor as part of your entire postural and core system—not just a bladder control muscle.

Fiction #4: You Can Learn Everything You Need from an App or Video

Fact:

Generic programs don’t account for muscle imbalances, breathing dysfunction, alignment issues, or past injuries. Many women do Kegels incorrectly—bearing down instead of lifting—or contract only part of the pelvic floor.

What You Need Instead:

A personalized evaluation by a pelvic health physiotherapist. We ensure you’re recruiting the right muscles in the right way, integrated into real-life movement patterns.

Fiction #5: All Pelvic Floor Exercises Are Internal

Fact:

While internal assessments can be valuable, not all effective pelvic floor training involves internal work. Many women improve dramatically through external cues, breathing strategies, postural correction, and functional exercises.

What You Need Instead:

A plan that respects your comfort and body awareness level—without relying solely on internal techniques. At YFS, we offer a variety of options to help you feel supported every step of the way.

Fiction #6: Once You Start, You Have to Do Pelvic Floor Exercises Forever

Fact:

Like any rehab program, the goal is to build function—not dependency. Once your pelvic floor is well-integrated into your breathing and movement system, you won’t need to do isolated exercises forever.

What You Need Instead:

A transitional plan. We help you progress from specific pelvic floor work to full-body strength, movement, and postural control that supports long-term pelvic health.

Fiction #7: You Can’t Do Pelvic Floor Exercises if You’re Pregnant or Menopausal

Fact:

You absolutely can and often should do pelvic floor work during pregnancy, postpartum, and menopause—with guidance. These life phases affect hormones, posture, joint mobility, and pressure systems, which in turn affect how the pelvic floor works.

What You Need Instead:

Supervision from a trained physiotherapist who understands how your needs shift with your life stage. YourFormSux designs phase-appropriate, body-aware programs for women across all transitions.

Fiction #8: Strong Means Tight—and That’s a Good Thing

Fact:

A strong pelvic floor isn’t one that’s always clenched. True strength includes the ability to contract and relax. Constant tightness can lead to dysfunction, pain, or increased pressure on pelvic organs.

What You Need Instead:

Balanced training. We teach you how to feel both release and support in your pelvic floor, coordinating it with your breath and core engagement for smoother, safer function.

Why Full-Body Physiotherapy Makes the Difference

Pelvic floor exercises work best when they’re not done in isolation. At YourFormSux, we assess how your breathing, core, posture, hips, and spine all influence pelvic performance. We then design a program that fits your body—not the other way around.

Whether you need help with:

Leaking during workouts

Pressure or heaviness

Pelvic pain

Postpartum healing

Diastasis recti

Core weakness or back pain

…we treat it at the root with a personalized, movement-integrated strategy.

Real Results Come From Real Understanding

Pelvic floor exercises aren’t magic, but they are powerful when used correctly. Knowing when, how, and why to do them—under the guidance of a qualified physiotherapist—can mean the difference between frustration and freedom.

At YFS, we help women across Canada reclaim their core, realign their bodies, and restore pelvic health with clarity and confidence.

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