Top Pelvic Floor Myths That Could Be Affecting Your Health

Top Pelvic Floor Myths That Could Be Affecting Your Health reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

Pelvic floor health is an essential yet often overlooked component of a woman’s overall well-being. These muscles do far more than control the bladder—they help support the spine, stabilize the pelvis, and regulate core pressure. Despite their importance, pelvic floor concerns are often misunderstood due to widespread myths and half-truths. Unfortunately, believing these myths can lead to delayed diagnosis, incorrect treatment, and chronic symptoms.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we specialize in pelvic health physiotherapy that helps women across Canada uncover the real reasons behind their discomfort, pain, or dysfunction. Here, we debunk the most common pelvic floor myths—and explain how they might be impacting your posture, mobility, and quality of life.

Myth #1: Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Only Happens to Women After Childbirth

Reality: Pregnancy and childbirth are risk factors, but not prerequisites.

While postpartum women are more likely to experience pelvic floor dysfunction, it can also affect women who’ve never been pregnant. Athletes, women with high-stress lifestyles, those with poor posture, or individuals with connective tissue disorders (like hypermobility) may develop symptoms like leakage, pressure, or pelvic pain.

How It Affects Your Health: Waiting until symptoms worsen post-childbirth to seek help ignores the many early signs and preventative opportunities available earlier in life.

Myth #2: You Should Just Do Kegels

Reality: Kegels are not a one-size-fits-all solution.

Blindly doing Kegels without understanding your pelvic floor’s current tone can lead to increased muscle tension, pain, or worsening dysfunction. Some women need relaxation and release—not more contraction. Overactive pelvic floor muscles are just as common as weak ones, especially in women with chronic stress or poor breathing mechanics.

How It Affects Your Health: Doing the wrong exercises can create more imbalance, delay recovery, and limit core function. A tailored approach is essential.

Myth #3: Incontinence Is Just a Normal Part of Aging or Motherhood

Reality: Incontinence is common, but never normal.

Urine leakage during laughter, coughing, or running may be normalized in casual conversation, but it’s a clear sign of pelvic floor dysfunction. These symptoms signal a breakdown in the coordination between your core, breath, and pelvic muscles—and they can be effectively treated with physiotherapy.

How It Affects Your Health: Ignoring incontinence increases the risk of long-term bladder issues, reduced activity levels, and lowered self-esteem.

Myth #4: If You Don’t Have Symptoms, You Don’t Have Pelvic Floor Dysfunction

Reality: Some signs of dysfunction are subtle—or compensated for by other muscles.

Pelvic floor issues can manifest as low back pain, hip discomfort, tailbone sensitivity, constipation, or even difficulty sitting comfortably for long periods. Because the pelvic floor works as part of your postural system, imbalance elsewhere in the body can mask deeper dysfunctions.

How It Affects Your Health: Without proper evaluation, you may unknowingly adopt compensatory postures that lead to chronic pain or restricted movement.

Myth #5: You Can’t Exercise With Pelvic Floor Dysfunction

Reality: You can and should move—but wisely and with support.

Many women avoid exercise out of fear they’ll make symptoms worse. While high-impact activities might need to be temporarily modified, avoiding movement entirely leads to deconditioning, stiffness, and further dysfunction. With the right physiotherapy program, you can rebuild strength and return to your favourite workouts.

How It Affects Your Health: Inactivity leads to a weakened core, poor circulation, and mental fatigue. Movement is part of the solution—not the problem.

Myth #6: Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Is a Local Problem

Reality: It’s a full-body issue, deeply tied to posture, breath, and alignment.

Your pelvic floor is part of a system that includes the diaphragm, transverse abdominis, multifidus, and hips. Poor rib mobility, shallow breathing, and slouched posture all change how your pelvic floor functions. Treating it in isolation without addressing the body’s mechanics often leads to incomplete recovery.

How It Affects Your Health: A local-only approach overlooks the root causes of dysfunction and can lead to recurrence or new pain patterns elsewhere in the body.

Myth #7: Surgery Is the Best Option for Pelvic Organ Prolapse or Incontinence

Reality: Surgery is a tool—not a cure—and it’s not always the first step.

While some cases of prolapse or severe incontinence may require surgical intervention, conservative management through physiotherapy is highly effective for many women. Pre-surgical therapy also improves outcomes, while post-surgical rehab helps you recover safely and prevent recurrence.

How It Affects Your Health: Skipping physiotherapy may result in over-reliance on surgery, longer healing timelines, and unaddressed movement issues that caused the dysfunction in the first place.

The Physiotherapy Approach at YFS: Replacing Myths with Movement-Based Healing

At YourFormSux, we don’t just treat the pelvic floor—we assess how your entire body contributes to dysfunction or recovery. Our approach includes:

Comprehensive assessments that evaluate pelvic tone, posture, breathing, and movement patterns

Targeted treatments that balance release, coordination, and strength-building

Education on how daily habits—like how you sit, lift, breathe, or move—affect pelvic health

Long-term support for women recovering from childbirth, managing chronic pain, or seeking to return to exercise safely

Knowledge is Power—and Prevention

Pelvic floor dysfunction doesn’t just happen overnight. It builds over time through posture imbalances, breath-holding, poor lifting mechanics, and unaddressed symptoms. The earlier you seek support, the more options you have for non-invasive, effective treatment.

Whether you’re experiencing symptoms or simply want to improve your alignment, core strength, and mobility, your pelvic floor deserves the same care and attention as the rest of your body.

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