The Truth About Pelvic Floor Health in Athletes reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Athletes are often seen as the embodiment of healthstrong, agile, and physically in tune with their bodies. But even among the fittest women, pelvic floor dysfunction is surprisingly common. In fact, elite athletes, weekend warriors, and regular gym-goers can all face pelvic health challenges that are frequently overlooked or misunderstood.
At YourFormSux (YFS), we work with active women across Canada who are shocked to learn that their symptomslike leaking during a workout, core instability, or deep pelvic painare signs of pelvic floor dysfunction, not just “normal” athletic side effects. Lets dive into the myths that keep athletes misinformed, and the truths that can unlock real performance and recovery.
Myth 1: Im fit, so my pelvic floor must be strong.
Reality:
Fitness does not guarantee a functional pelvic floor. Many athletes have tight, overactive, or uncoordinated pelvic floor muscles, especially those involved in high-impact or core-intensive sports.
Common symptoms that suggest dysfunction include:
Leaking while running, jumping, or lifting
A sensation of heaviness or pressure
Hip or lower back pain that doesnt resolve with stretching
Abdominal doming or bulging during movement
Core instability despite frequent training
Strength alone doesnt equal pelvic healthcoordination and balance do.
Myth 2: If I leak during exercise, I just need to do more Kegels.
Reality:
For many athletic women, the pelvic floor is already working overtime. Adding more contractions (Kegels) without understanding the root issue can actually make symptoms worse.
Pelvic physiotherapy evaluates whether your muscles need:
Relaxation instead of tightening
Better timing and coordination with breathing and movement
Pressure management to avoid straining during lifts or sprints
Integration with your deep core and diaphragm
At YFS, we often see athletes improve not by doing morebut by doing better.
Myth 3: Leaking during a workout is normal if you train hard enough.
Reality:
Leaking urineno matter how intense your routineis not a sign of high performance. Its a sign of excessive internal pressure and/or poor support from the pelvic floor and core system.
Your body should be able to handle:
The impact of a jump
The force of a barbell lift
The sprinting push-off
If it cant, the answer isnt to push through. Its to train smarter, not harder.
Myth 4: Pelvic floor therapy is only for postpartum women.
Reality:
While pregnancy can stress the pelvic floor, athletes of all life stagesteenagers, college competitors, peri-menopausal womencan benefit from pelvic physiotherapy.
Common athletic contributors to dysfunction include:
Repetitive high-impact activities (running, gymnastics, CrossFit)
Poor breathing mechanics during bracing or lifting
Core overuse without pelvic floor integration
Frequent straining or lack of postural awareness
Being active doesnt prevent dysfunctionbut it can mask it.
Myth 5: If I don’t have pain, my pelvic floor must be fine.
Reality:
Many athletes compensate so well that they experience symptoms only under high load or fatigue. Others ignore early signs like:
Leaking only sometimes
Core instability despite ab work
Pelvic discomfort with speed or load
Inability to fully relax after training
These arent harmless quirks. Theyre messages from your bodyones that a pelvic physiotherapist is trained to decode and treat.
How Physiotherapy Supports Athletic Performance and Longevity
Pelvic floor therapy isnt just about managing symptomsits about optimizing function so athletes can perform at their peak without compromising health.
At YFS, your treatment includes:
Functional assessment of your core, breathing, pelvic floor, and alignment
Sport-specific retraining to reduce pressure and improve timing
Postural and mobility support for full-body coordination
Progressive strength and control development
Education on how to self-monitor and prevent future strain
Whether you’re preparing for a competition or want to keep training pain-free long term, physiotherapy offers the tools to perform without limits.
Real Recovery for Real Athletes
You shouldnt have to choose between being active and being symptom-free. The truth is: the sooner you understand how your pelvic floor supports your sport, the better your recovery, endurance, and performance will be.
Pelvic health is athletic health. And at YFS, we help you build bothstronger, smarter, and with long-term results.
Final Thoughts
Pelvic floor dysfunction isnt limited to older women or postpartum moms. It affects athletes tooand ignoring it wont make it go away. By challenging the myths and embracing the truths, you can prevent long-term problems, avoid unnecessary limitations, and feel more powerful in every movement.
Whether you’re lifting weights, running races, or doing yoga, your pelvic floor deserves just as much training as the rest of your body. Let YourFormSux help you stay active, informed, and in control.





