Why Pelvic Floor Exercises Arent Always the Answer to Your Problems reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
When it comes to womens pelvic health, just do Kegels is advice youve probably heard more than once. While pelvic floor exercises like Kegels can be beneficial in certain situations, they are not a one-size-fits-all solution. In fact, doing them without proper guidance may worsen your symptoms or delay the care you actually need.
At YourFormSux, we help women across Canada understand their bodies better through personalized pelvic physiotherapynot generic instructions. Lets explore why pelvic floor exercises arent always the answer to your pelvic health problems, and what a better, more effective approach looks like.
1. You Might Be Strengthening the Wrong Problem
The assumption:
My pelvic floor is weak, so I should do Kegels to fix it.
The truth:
Pelvic floor dysfunction doesnt always stem from weakness. Many women actually have tense, overactive, or uncoordinated pelvic floor muscles. Adding more contraction (through Kegels) without understanding your baseline can increase tightness, worsen symptoms like pain or leakage, and create new imbalances.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Evaluates whether your muscles are too tight, too loose, or simply uncoordinated
Uses breathing, relaxation, or mobility work instead ofor beforestrengthening
Focuses on function over force
2. Strength Doesnt Equal Coordination
The assumption:
If I just make my pelvic muscles stronger, everything will work better.
The truth:
You can have a strong pelvic floor but still struggle with leaking, prolapse symptoms, or pain if your muscles arent firing at the right time. The timing of muscle engagement matters just as much as strengthespecially during movement, lifting, sneezing, or transitioning positions.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Trains neuromuscular coordination between pelvic floor, core, and diaphragm
Helps you learn when to relax and when to contract, depending on movement
Reconnects your breath and pelvic floor to restore natural timing
3. Kegels Done Incorrectly Can Create New Problems
The assumption:
Ive been doing Kegels for weeks, but nothings improving.
The truth:
Most women arent taught how to do Kegels properly. Without feedback or professional guidance, its easy to overuse the wrong muscleslike glutes, inner thighs, or abdominalsand miss the pelvic floor entirely. Worse, holding your breath or tensing during Kegels can increase pelvic pressure and make prolapse or leakage worse.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Teaches correct technique through verbal cues, breathwork, and biofeedback
Identifies and corrects compensation patterns
Ensures your exercise form supportsnot sabotagesyour recovery
4. Some Symptoms Require Release, Not Strength
The assumption:
All pelvic floor symptoms mean I need to strengthen.
The truth:
Symptoms like painful intercourse, tailbone pain, pelvic tension, or a constant urge to urinate often point to an overactive pelvic floor. These muscles may be holding on too tightly, not relaxing between contractions. Trying to strengthen already tense muscles can lead to frustration and more pain.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Uses internal or external manual therapy to release tight tissues
Incorporates mobility work, hip alignment, and nervous system downregulation
Encourages postural and breathing changes that allow natural pelvic floor release
5. The Pelvic Floor Doesnt Work Alone
The assumption:
Kegels are all I need for pelvic health.
The truth:
Your pelvic floor is one part of a larger system. It works closely with your deep core, diaphragm, hips, and posture. If you’re not addressing your alignment, breath mechanics, and movement patterns, isolated Kegels wont solve the problem.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Assesses posture, spinal alignment, and hip mobility
Improves core-pelvic floor synergy for daily movements
Builds full-body integration so your pelvic floor functions effortlessly
6. Pelvic Floor Issues Are About More Than Muscles
The assumption:
Pelvic health is just about physical strength.
The truth:
Stress, trauma, anxiety, and hormonal changes can all impact your pelvic floor. Emotional holding patterns often show up as muscle tension, breath restriction, or over-bracing. Ignoring these elements limits your recovery.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Addresses the mind-body connection through nervous system regulation
Uses breath training and posture to reduce emotional tension in the pelvis
Helps you tune into your body with more trust and awareness
7. Self-Diagnosing Delays Proper Care
The assumption:
Ill try some exercises on my own and see what happens.
The truth:
Pelvic floor dysfunction is nuanced, and without proper assessment, youre guessing. Online routines or app-guided Kegels may mask symptoms or provide temporary reliefbut they dont get to the root of the problem.
What physiotherapy does instead:
Offers a full-body, root-cause evaluation with customized care
Tracks your progress with real-time feedback and clinical expertise
Helps you avoid wasting time on ineffective or harmful routines
Final Thoughts
Pelvic floor exercises arent badtheyre just not always the right place to start. The key to healing and thriving is knowing what your body truly needs and choosing movement that matches your physiology, lifestyle, and goals.
At YourFormSux, we help women in Canada move beyond myths and misinformation. With pelvic physiotherapy tailored to your real conditionnot generic solutionsyou can experience relief, confidence, and control in your body.






