The Role of Physiotherapy in Overcoming Pelvic Floor Myths

The Role of Physiotherapy in Overcoming Pelvic Floor Myths reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

Pelvic floor health is too often misunderstood, underdiagnosed, and cloaked in cultural silence. Despite how integral these muscles are to posture, continence, intimacy, and core stability, many women are still misinformed—or entirely uninformed—about how their pelvic floor works and what can go wrong. As a result, harmful myths persist, delaying care and compromising quality of life.

Physiotherapy plays a vital role in dismantling these myths through assessment, education, and individualized treatment. At YourFormSux (YFS), we help women across Canada better understand their pelvic floor and reclaim agency over their bodies. This blog explores the most damaging pelvic floor myths and shows how physiotherapy offers a clear path to knowledge, strength, and healing.

Myth 1: “Pelvic floor dysfunction is something you just live with”

Reality: Many women believe that issues like leaking urine, pelvic pressure, or painful sex are inevitable—especially after childbirth or with aging. But these symptoms are common, not normal. They are signs that your pelvic floor, core, or posture isn’t functioning properly. With proper assessment and care, most symptoms can be improved—or fully resolved—without medication or surgery.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

A pelvic floor physiotherapist identifies the root cause of symptoms and develops a personalized plan that includes hands-on therapy, movement correction, and education. By addressing the why behind your symptoms, physiotherapy helps you recover function, not just manage discomfort.

Myth 2: “If I’m not leaking, my pelvic floor must be fine”

Reality: Urinary incontinence is just one possible symptom of pelvic floor dysfunction. Other signs include constipation, hip or low back pain, painful intercourse, a feeling of heaviness in the pelvis, or difficulty activating the core. Dysfunction often presents subtly, especially in active or postpartum women.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

Pelvic floor physiotherapists don’t wait for dramatic symptoms. Through internal and external exams, they assess muscle tone, coordination, breath mechanics, and pelvic alignment to catch early dysfunction. This preventative care approach can stop problems from worsening and support long-term health.

Myth 3: “Kegels fix everything”

Reality: While Kegels are often the first-line recommendation, they aren’t a universal solution. Many women have tight or overactive pelvic floor muscles, not weak ones. Performing Kegels in these cases can make symptoms worse—leading to more pain, urgency, or dysfunction.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

Your therapist will evaluate whether your pelvic floor needs to be strengthened, relaxed, or retrained. Treatment may include release techniques, breath work, glute activation, and posture adjustments—tools that go far beyond isolated Kegels.

Myth 4: “Only women who’ve had vaginal births need pelvic floor therapy”

Reality: Vaginal deliveries can stretch and weaken pelvic floor muscles, but Cesarean births and pregnancy itself also impact pelvic alignment, breathing, and core stability. Even women who’ve never been pregnant can develop dysfunction due to poor posture, high-impact sports, or sedentary lifestyles.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

At YFS, our whole-body assessments evaluate pelvic floor function in relation to breathing patterns, spinal mechanics, hip mobility, and abdominal pressure. Whether you’re a runner, a new mom, or simply dealing with unexplained symptoms, physiotherapy meets you where you are.

Myth 5: “Pain during sex is just part of being postpartum or aging”

Reality: Postpartum recovery and hormonal shifts can affect vaginal tissue and pelvic muscle tone, but pain is not something you have to accept. Discomfort during intimacy often signals tightness, scar tissue, or uncoordinated muscle function—all of which are highly treatable.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

Pelvic health physiotherapists use gentle manual techniques to release muscle tension, mobilize scar tissue, and guide you through desensitization and reconnection. Education and support help you return to intimacy with confidence and comfort.

Myth 6: “Pelvic floor therapy is just about exercises”

Reality: Pelvic physiotherapy isn’t a set of cookie-cutter workouts. It’s a holistic approach to how you breathe, move, sit, stand, lift, and stabilize. In fact, your pelvic floor is part of a system that includes the diaphragm, core, hips, and spine—all of which need to work together for true function.

How Physiotherapy Helps:

We don’t just give you exercises. We teach you to breathe better, align your spine, release tension, activate your glutes, and move in ways that support—not strain—your pelvic floor. It’s full-body recovery, not isolated muscle work.

Why Busting These Myths Matters

Misinformation delays recovery, limits options, and leaves women feeling broken or alone. The truth is, most pelvic floor dysfunction is:

Preventable with early assessment

Treatable without surgery

Improved by posture, breathing, and movement training

Common, but not something to suffer through silently

At YFS, we believe that the first step toward healing is accurate, honest education—followed by individualized physiotherapy that empowers you to feel strong, supported, and symptom-free.

The Path to Healing Starts with the Truth

Your pelvic floor is not a mystery. It’s not a problem to be hidden or a condition to be endured. It’s a dynamic part of your body that responds to how you move, breathe, and live—and it deserves expert care.

Book a Consultation

Leave a Reply