The Most Common Pelvic Floor Myths and Why They’re Wrong

The Most Common Pelvic Floor Myths and Why They’re Wrong reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

Pelvic floor health is a vital, yet often misunderstood, component of overall well-being—especially for women navigating postpartum recovery, incontinence, back pain, or posture-related dysfunctions. Unfortunately, widespread myths about the pelvic floor continue to prevent people from getting proper care, delaying recovery and sometimes making symptoms worse. At YourFormSux (YFS), our goal is to provide evidence-based education and personalized physiotherapy strategies that cut through misinformation and empower women to take control of their core health.

Let’s explore the most common pelvic floor myths and the real facts behind them—because what you don’t know can hurt you.

Myth 1: Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Only Affects Older Women

The truth: Pelvic floor issues can affect women of any age—even those who haven’t had children.

While age and childbirth are known risk factors for pelvic floor dysfunction, young women, athletes, and even teenagers can experience problems such as urinary leakage, pain with intercourse, or pelvic heaviness. Repetitive high-impact sports, poor posture, chronic constipation, and prolonged sitting can all contribute to muscle imbalances and pressure on the pelvic floor.

Ignoring symptoms because you think you’re “too young” to have pelvic floor issues can delay crucial care. Physiotherapy offers proactive solutions at every life stage.

Myth 2: Kegels Are the Only Solution to Pelvic Floor Problems

The truth: Kegels (pelvic floor contractions) are not a one-size-fits-all remedy—and in some cases, they can make things worse.

While Kegels are helpful for some forms of pelvic floor weakness, not everyone needs strengthening. Many women actually suffer from overactive pelvic floor muscles—tight, tense muscles that can’t relax properly. Doing Kegels without first assessing whether your muscles need strengthening or lengthening may increase pain, worsen incontinence, or contribute to pelvic organ prolapse.

A pelvic health physiotherapist assesses your specific condition and creates a personalized treatment plan, which may involve relaxation techniques, breathwork, posture correction, and mobility exercises—not just muscle contractions.

Myth 3: If You Don’t Have Incontinence, Your Pelvic Floor Is Fine

The truth: Pelvic floor dysfunction includes more than just bladder leakage.

Symptoms like hip pain, low back pain, painful sex, constipation, pelvic heaviness, or even poor posture may all point to pelvic floor imbalances. These muscles don’t work in isolation—they coordinate with the diaphragm, abdominals, and spine. If your pelvic floor isn’t functioning properly, it can affect your whole movement system.

At YourFormSux, we often see clients who come in for posture or core issues and discover their symptoms stem from pelvic floor dysfunction they weren’t even aware of.

Myth 4: Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Is Inevitable After Childbirth

The truth: While childbirth places stress on the pelvic floor, dysfunction is not inevitable—and it is treatable.

Vaginal delivery can stretch or weaken the pelvic floor, but not every woman will experience problems. Those who do aren’t “broken”—they simply need structured, individualized rehabilitation. Much like rehabbing a knee or shoulder injury, pelvic floor recovery requires specific exercises, postural alignment, and guided movement to restore strength and function.

Postpartum physiotherapy is a powerful tool that helps new moms recover, improve posture, reduce pelvic pain, and prevent long-term complications.

Myth 5: You Can Fix Pelvic Floor Issues on Your Own with Online Workouts

The truth: Self-guided programs can help with general fitness but may not address the root cause of your pelvic floor dysfunction.

YouTube videos and generic apps rarely offer the individualized assessment needed to identify your specific postural habits, breathing patterns, or muscle coordination issues. In fact, doing the wrong exercises could reinforce dysfunction—especially if your posture is misaligned or if your symptoms stem from overactivity rather than weakness.

A physiotherapist trained in pelvic health considers your whole body, including spinal alignment, breathing, movement mechanics, and lifestyle factors. They guide you step-by-step with exercises tailored to your needs—not a one-size-fits-all routine.

Myth 6: Pelvic Floor Issues Only Matter if You’re Pregnant or Postpartum

The truth: Pelvic floor health affects all aspects of a woman’s life—during pregnancy, postpartum, menopause, and beyond.

Even if you’ve never had children, your pelvic floor plays a role in sexual function, bladder and bowel control, and spinal stability. Sedentary work, stress, athletic training, or poor posture can all disrupt pelvic floor balance.

At YFS, we work with women of all life stages to improve pelvic awareness, prevent dysfunction, and support core strength and posture.

Myth 7: You Should Always “Hold It In” to Strengthen Your Pelvic Floor

The truth: Constantly clenching your pelvic floor muscles can lead to overactivity, poor coordination, and pain.

A healthy pelvic floor doesn’t stay tight all the time—it moves in coordination with your breath and posture. Just like any other muscle group, the pelvic floor needs to relax as well as contract. Learning how to lengthen, release, and coordinate pelvic movement is often more beneficial than simply “holding it in.”

Physiotherapists teach you how to engage these muscles properly—at the right time and with the right amount of effort.

Aligning Pelvic Health with Whole-Body Posture

At YourFormSux, we don’t treat the pelvic floor in isolation. We consider how your posture, movement habits, core activation, and lifestyle all interact with pelvic function. A tilted pelvis, misaligned spine, or restricted diaphragm can all impact how your pelvic floor performs.

By focusing on posture-first physiotherapy, we help women:

Identify imbalances and postural strain

Restore core and pelvic coordination

Improve breathing mechanics for deep core support

Alleviate pressure and tension that worsen symptoms

Build confidence and long-term strength

Don’t Let Misinformation Hold You Back

The truth is simple: pelvic floor dysfunction is common, treatable, and not something you just have to live with. But to get the right help, you need to understand your body—and let go of persistent myths.

If you’re experiencing symptoms or want to improve your posture, core strength, or pelvic health, reach out to YourFormSux. Our physiotherapists deliver evidence-informed care that empowers you to take charge of your well-being and move forward with confidence.

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