The Pelvic Floor: What You Should Know Beyond the Myths

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

The pelvic floor is one of the most critical muscle groups in a woman’s body—yet it’s also one of the least understood. Whether it’s through outdated advice, social discomfort, or misinformation online, many women are left confused about what their pelvic floor actually does and how to care for it. Unfortunately, this confusion often leads to unnecessary suffering, ignored symptoms, or ineffective treatments.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we believe every woman in Canada deserves clear, accurate, and empowering information about pelvic health. In this blog, we go beyond the common myths to share what you truly need to know about your pelvic floor—so you can take control of your well-being with confidence and clarity.

What Is the Pelvic Floor—Really?

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissues that form a supportive hammock at the base of your pelvis. These muscles:

Support the bladder, uterus, and rectum

Control urination and bowel movements

Stabilize the core and spine

Play a key role in sexual function

Coordinate with breathing and posture

When functioning properly, the pelvic floor activates and relaxes in response to everyday movements like standing, lifting, coughing, or sneezing. It works quietly in the background—until something goes wrong.

Myth 1: The Pelvic Floor Just Needs to Be Strong

The truth: It needs to be strong and coordinated.

Pelvic floor dysfunction can happen when the muscles are too weak, but also when they are too tight or poorly timed. In fact, many women who feel tension, pressure, or pain in the pelvis may have an overactive pelvic floor that struggles to relax.

Strengthening is only part of the solution. Coordination, mobility, and breathing are just as essential.

Myth 2: Kegels Are the Answer for Everyone

The truth: Kegels may help—or they may make symptoms worse.

Kegels (pelvic floor contractions) are frequently recommended, but without proper assessment, they can do more harm than good. For women with tight pelvic floor muscles, Kegels increase tension and may worsen leaking, urgency, or pain.

A pelvic health physiotherapist will help you determine whether you need to strengthen, release, or retrain your pelvic floor—because every body is different.

Myth 3: You’ll Know If You Have Pelvic Floor Dysfunction

The truth: Many women have no idea until symptoms become disruptive.

Pelvic floor dysfunction can present in subtle ways:

Chronic low back or hip pain

Difficulty connecting with the core during workouts

Incomplete bladder emptying

Painful sex

Constipation

Unexplained pelvic or tailbone discomfort

These symptoms are often misattributed to other conditions—yet they can all be signs that your pelvic floor needs attention.

Myth 4: It Only Affects Women After Childbirth

The truth: Anyone can develop pelvic floor dysfunction.

Although childbirth is a major contributor to pelvic floor stress, it’s not the only one. High-impact athletes, desk workers, teenagers, and postmenopausal women can all experience pelvic floor issues due to poor posture, stress, heavy lifting, hormonal changes, or breathing dysfunction.

You don’t need to have had a baby to benefit from pelvic floor care.

What You Should Know About Healing and Support

Understanding your pelvic floor beyond the myths is just the beginning. Here’s what really matters when it comes to healing:

1. Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Is Treatable—Without Surgery

Many women assume surgery is the only option for conditions like prolapse or incontinence. In reality, pelvic floor physiotherapy is the recommended first line of treatment for most non-urgent cases. With the right plan, symptoms can often improve dramatically.

2. Breath and Posture Are Essential

Your pelvic floor responds directly to breathing patterns and alignment. Slouched posture or shallow chest breathing can disrupt the natural rhythm of pelvic activation and relaxation. Physiotherapy teaches you to:

Breathe with the diaphragm

Stack the ribs and pelvis

Coordinate breath with movement

This creates the foundation for healthy pelvic function.

3. Movement and Exercise Can Be Safe and Supportive

Avoiding exercise often leads to more dysfunction. The goal isn’t to stop moving—it’s to move smartly. With physiotherapy, you can:

Return to fitness without fear of leakage

Lift, run, and stretch with proper pelvic engagement

Modify your routines to protect your pelvic floor while building strength

Motion, when done right, supports recovery and resilience.

4. There Is No “Normal” That Includes Pain, Pressure, or Leakage

Many women have been taught to accept their symptoms:

“It’s just part of being a mom.”

“That’s what aging does.”

“Everyone leaks when they jump.”

These statements are myths that keep women stuck. Symptoms may be common, but they are not normal, and they are certainly not something you have to endure.

Your Next Step: Choose to Get Informed and Empowered

Whether you’re experiencing pelvic symptoms or simply want to understand your body better, it’s never too early—or too late—to invest in pelvic health. At YourFormSux, we provide pelvic floor physiotherapy that is personalized, respectful, and grounded in the real-life needs of Canadian women.

We assess more than just the muscles—we look at your lifestyle, posture, stress, core, and breath to build a plan that works for you. No generic advice, no shame—just support that makes sense.

Final Thoughts

The pelvic floor doesn’t need mystery, silence, or one-size-fits-all answers. It needs awareness, understanding, and care that looks at the whole woman—not just one muscle group. You deserve more than myths—you deserve real insight, real support, and a body that moves and feels its best.

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