Understanding Pelvic Floor Pain: Myths and Realities You Need to Know

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

Pelvic floor pain can be deeply frustrating, confusing, and even isolating. Whether it shows up as aching in the lower abdomen, pain during intercourse, pressure in the pelvis, or discomfort in the tailbone, it’s often misunderstood—not only by the people experiencing it, but sometimes even by health professionals unfamiliar with the complexity of the pelvic floor.

At YourFormSux, we believe in educating and empowering women through physiotherapy-led insights that debunk myths and bring clarity to confusing symptoms. If you’ve been told your pelvic pain is “just stress” or “something you have to live with,” it’s time for a different message—one based on truth, clinical evidence, and whole-body understanding.

Let’s explore the most common myths about pelvic floor pain and uncover the realities that can help you move toward lasting relief.

Myth #1: Pelvic pain is normal for women—especially during sex.

Reality: Pain during intercourse is common, but it is never normal.

Whether it’s sharp, burning, or deep aching pain, discomfort during penetration or sexual activity is a sign that your pelvic floor muscles may be too tight, uncoordinated, or reacting to internal pressure improperly. It could also be related to past trauma, scar tissue, or hormonal shifts.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: A trained pelvic health physiotherapist can assess muscle tone and help release tension, restore mobility, and rebuild comfortable, confident movement in your pelvic region.

Myth #2: Only older women experience pelvic floor pain.

Reality: Pelvic pain can affect women of all ages—from teens to seniors.

Young athletes, new mothers, people with high-stress lifestyles, or those with poor posture can all experience pelvic floor tension. It may begin subtly, with discomfort while sitting, tailbone pain after a fall, or tight hips during exercise, but it often escalates over time if left untreated.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: Pelvic floor dysfunction is about patterns—not age. Identifying movement imbalances, breathing restrictions, and muscular compensation early leads to better outcomes.

Myth #3: You just need to do Kegels to fix it.

Reality: Kegels are not always the answer—in fact, they can make pelvic floor pain worse.

If your pelvic floor muscles are already overactive or clenched, doing more contractions (Kegels) adds pressure and may intensify symptoms like burning, aching, or vaginal pain. The first step in recovery is often learning to let go—not tighten more.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: Treatment begins with learning how to breathe deeply, coordinate your diaphragm with your pelvic floor, and gently release tension. Kegels may come later—but only when they’re appropriate.

Myth #4: Pelvic floor pain means something is wrong with your reproductive organs.

Reality: While it may feel like the pain is coming from your uterus or bladder, the real issue is often musculoskeletal.

Tight or unbalanced pelvic floor muscles can refer pain to the bladder, vagina, rectum, or tailbone. Many women are sent for scans or testing only to be told that “everything looks normal.” What’s often missing is a pelvic health exam by someone trained to assess internal muscle function.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: Pain isn’t always structural. A detailed evaluation can reveal tension patterns, trigger points, or pressure issues that are invisible on imaging—but very real to your body.

Myth #5: Pelvic floor pain is caused by weakness.

Reality: Pain is more often caused by tension and overactivity, not weakness.

Many people with pelvic pain have strong pelvic floor muscles—but they’re stuck in a clenched or guarded state. This chronic contraction reduces blood flow, restricts movement, and irritates nerves, leading to burning, aching, or pressure-like sensations.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: Learning to soften, breathe, and improve coordination is usually the first step. Strengthening without relaxation can reinforce dysfunction and worsen pain.

Myth #6: If your doctor didn’t mention pelvic floor therapy, you don’t need it.

Reality: Many physicians aren’t trained in pelvic floor assessment, and pelvic health is often under-referred.

Pelvic floor physiotherapy is a specialty that fills the gap between musculoskeletal therapy and internal health. If you’ve had repeated tests with no clear diagnosis—but your symptoms persist—you may benefit from physiotherapy even if your doctor hasn’t brought it up.

Physiotherapist’s perspective: If you’re feeling pain, pressure, or discomfort in your pelvic region, don’t wait for someone else to validate it. A pelvic health physiotherapist is trained to listen, assess, and guide your recovery.

What Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Can Do for Pain Relief

Evaluate your posture, alignment, and breathing patterns

Check for tension, trigger points, or scar tissue internally and externally

Teach breath-based relaxation techniques that downregulate pain responses

Guide you through movement retraining and muscle coordination

Help restore sexual function, bladder control, and core stability

Support you emotionally by validating your experience and offering practical solutions

Signs You May Benefit from Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy

Persistent tailbone, hip, or groin pain

Painful intercourse or internal exams

A sensation of heaviness or pressure in the pelvis

Difficulty sitting for long periods

Pain with bowel movements or urination

Deep pelvic aches during or after exercise

Lower abdominal tension with stress or anxiety

Final Thoughts

Pelvic floor pain is not in your head. It’s not something to push through, ignore, or self-diagnose based on online trends. Real recovery starts with real information and professional support tailored to your body’s specific needs.

At YourFormSux, we specialize in guiding women toward pain-free movement, deeper body awareness, and long-term pelvic health. Our physiotherapy programs are rooted in evidence—not myths—and designed to help you feel stronger, freer, and more in control.

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