Understanding Your Pelvic Floor: What’s Real and What’s Not

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

The pelvic floor is a vital part of your body’s core system, yet many women have little understanding of its function—until something goes wrong. Myths, half-truths, and misinformation often stand in the way of proper care, delaying recovery and allowing dysfunction to persist for years. Whether you’re postpartum, dealing with chronic back pain, or simply looking to strengthen your foundation, understanding what’s real (and what’s not) about the pelvic floor is essential.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we specialize in women’s pelvic health and physiotherapy. In this blog, we’ll walk you through the truths and falsehoods surrounding the pelvic floor, so you can better care for this crucial part of your body.

What Is the Pelvic Floor, Really?

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissue that spans the bottom of the pelvis. It supports the bladder, uterus, and rectum, and plays a key role in urinary and bowel control, sexual function, childbirth, and spinal stability. Like any other muscle group, the pelvic floor can become weak, tight, uncoordinated, or dysfunctional—especially under the physical demands of pregnancy, childbirth, poor posture, or high-impact activity.

Pelvic Floor Myth #1: “If you’re not leaking, your pelvic floor is fine.”

Reality: Not all pelvic floor dysfunction presents as leaking. Symptoms like low back pain, hip tightness, pelvic pressure, constipation, painful sex, and poor posture can all indicate an issue. Many women experience subtle dysfunctions—like difficulty engaging their core or feeling unstable when lifting—that originate from the pelvic floor. You don’t have to wait for incontinence to appear before taking action.

Pelvic Floor Myth #2: “Kegels are the answer for everyone.”

Reality: Kegels may help if the pelvic floor is weak, but many women—especially athletes and postpartum mothers—have tight, overactive pelvic floor muscles that need release and lengthening instead. Doing Kegels in these cases can actually make things worse, leading to increased pain, urinary urgency, or pelvic pressure. A pelvic health physiotherapist will assess your baseline and create a program tailored to what your body needs—whether that’s strengthening, relaxing, or retraining the muscles.

Pelvic Floor Myth #3: “Childbirth ruins your pelvic floor forever.”

Reality: While childbirth does place intense stress on the pelvic floor, permanent damage is not inevitable. With the right physiotherapy, alignment work, and core integration, the pelvic floor can recover its strength and coordination. Many women go on to run, lift weights, and live without symptoms—if they receive the right support and education. Scar tissue, muscle trauma, or altered posture after birth can all be addressed through targeted therapy.

Pelvic Floor Myth #4: “C-sections protect the pelvic floor.”

Reality: Cesarean births avoid vaginal tearing, but they do not eliminate the impact of pregnancy on the pelvic floor. Nine months of pressure from the growing uterus, plus changes in breathing, alignment, and core engagement, all stress the pelvic floor. Post-C-section recovery also involves healing from abdominal surgery, which can impact posture, diaphragm function, and pelvic floor coordination. These issues are best addressed with full-body physiotherapy, not just scar management.

Pelvic Floor Myth #5: “Pain during sex after childbirth is just part of the process.”

Reality: While tenderness is common in the early weeks, persistent pain during intercourse is not normal. It may signal pelvic floor tightness, scar tissue restriction, hormonal dryness, or nerve irritation. These problems are highly treatable with pelvic floor physiotherapy, which may involve manual therapy, movement strategies, breathing techniques, and guidance on safe reintroduction to intimacy. You don’t have to just “wait it out” or “get used to it.”

Pelvic Floor Myth #6: “You can fix your pelvic floor with online workouts.”

Reality: While online resources can raise awareness, they rarely offer personalized, evidence-based guidance. The pelvic floor is complex, and what works for one woman may not help another—or could even cause harm. For example, doing high-volume Kegels or advanced core workouts without knowing your muscle tone or breathing patterns may increase intra-abdominal pressure and aggravate dysfunction. A pelvic floor physiotherapist evaluates your whole body and builds a plan that actually supports your recovery.

Pelvic Floor Truth: It’s Not Just About Muscles

What many people don’t realize is that the pelvic floor works in harmony with your diaphragm, deep abdominals, spine, glutes, and posture. If you’re always slouching, holding your breath, or tensing your core, you’re likely disrupting that system. Physiotherapy for pelvic health doesn’t just treat symptoms—it identifies and addresses root causes like poor spinal alignment, unbalanced breathing, weak glutes, or chronic tension patterns.

At YFS, our approach includes:

Postural correction and pelvic alignment

Breath training to restore pressure regulation

Manual therapy and scar tissue release

Full-body strength integration (especially hips and glutes)

Education on safe movement for lifting, bending, and daily activities

Takeaways for Better Pelvic Floor Health

Don’t wait for symptoms. Even if you feel “fine,” getting assessed postpartum—or at any life stage—can prevent future issues.

Pain, leaking, or pressure are common—but not normal. Don’t ignore them.

Not all pelvic floors need strengthening. You may need relaxation, alignment, or coordination training instead.

Full-body function matters. The way you stand, breathe, move, and sit directly impacts your pelvic floor.

The Truth Sets You Free—And Helps You Heal

Understanding what’s real about pelvic floor health helps you take control of your recovery, your comfort, and your confidence. Whether you’re navigating new motherhood, managing pain, or preparing for future physical activity, knowing what your pelvic floor truly needs is the first step toward lasting wellness.

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