How to Address Pelvic Floor Dysfunction: The Real Truth You Need to Know

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

Pelvic floor dysfunction affects millions of women, but too often, it’s dismissed as “normal,” misunderstood, or masked with temporary fixes. Whether you’re postpartum, navigating perimenopause, or just trying to make it through the day without discomfort, you deserve to know the truth: pelvic floor dysfunction is treatable—and the right support can make all the difference.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we help women across Canada address pelvic floor issues with honesty, expertise, and physiotherapy that works. This blog gives you the real facts about pelvic floor dysfunction, what causes it, and how to overcome it—without guesswork, shame, or quick fixes that fail.

What Is Pelvic Floor Dysfunction—Really?

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissues that support your bladder, uterus, and bowel. These muscles help control urination and bowel movements, stabilize your pelvis and spine, and contribute to sexual function.

Pelvic floor dysfunction (PFD) happens when these muscles:

Are too weak and can’t contract properly

Are too tight and can’t relax properly

Lack coordination with your core, breath, or movement

Symptoms vary depending on the root cause, but they often include:

Urinary leaking or urgency

Pelvic pain or pressure

Pain during sex

Constipation or difficulty emptying

Core instability or lower back pain

A sensation of “heaviness” or prolapse

The Real Causes Behind Pelvic Floor Dysfunction

Too many women are told pelvic floor problems are just part of having children or getting older. While life stages matter, the truth is that dysfunction is often the result of multiple factors, including:

Poor posture and breathing mechanics

Slouched posture or shallow breathing creates chronic pressure on the pelvic floor, disrupting coordination with the diaphragm and core.

High-impact exercise without proper technique

Running, weightlifting, and even yoga can strain the pelvic floor if you’re not managing intra-abdominal pressure.

Chronic constipation or straining

Constant bearing down weakens and overstretches pelvic tissues.

Pregnancy and delivery

Both vaginal and C-section deliveries can impact pelvic floor strength, tension, and alignment.

Stress and tension

Many women unknowingly hold tension in the pelvic floor, contributing to pain and tightness.

Hormonal shifts

Menopause reduces estrogen, which affects the elasticity and strength of pelvic tissues.

Understanding the why is key to treating the how—and that’s where physiotherapy comes in.

What Doesn’t Work (and Why It Fails)

Let’s get one thing clear:

Doing Kegels randomly is not a treatment plan.

Kegels can help if your pelvic floor is weak—but they can also make things worse if your muscles are too tight or uncoordinated. Other approaches that don’t address the full picture include:

Relying on pads or bladder protection as a “solution”

Ignoring discomfort during sex or bowel movements

Jumping back into fitness without core rehab

Hoping symptoms go away with time

These approaches don’t treat the root cause—they only mask symptoms.

How Physiotherapy Actually Fixes the Problem

At YourFormSux, pelvic health physiotherapy is a full-body, personalized approach that starts with understanding your unique muscle patterns, posture, and movement. Here’s how we address pelvic floor dysfunction effectively:

1. Comprehensive Assessment

We evaluate:

Pelvic floor tone and function (with consent, this may include internal assessment)

Breath and core connection

Posture and alignment

Movement habits, strength, and stability

Daily lifestyle patterns (sitting, lifting, toileting, etc.)

This holistic picture shows why your pelvic floor is struggling.

2. Breath and Core Reconnection

We teach diaphragmatic breathing to help regulate pressure in the core and pelvic floor system. Breathing is the foundation of pelvic floor function—it’s where strength and relaxation both begin.

Inhale: pelvic floor relaxes. Exhale: pelvic floor lifts.

3. Release and Relax (If Needed)

If your pelvic floor is overactive or tight, we focus first on downtraining—using manual therapy, body awareness, and mobility work to reduce tension before adding strength.

4. Functional Strength Training

Once the muscles are balanced, we build strength through:

Core integration with breath

Hip, glute, and abdominal support exercises

Functional tasks like squatting, lifting, and getting up from the floor

All movements are tailored to your lifestyle and goals.

5. Real-Life Application

We don’t stop at the clinic. We’ll coach you on:

Safe exercise return

Toileting habits that protect the pelvic floor

Sexual health and comfort

Movement strategies for lifting, carrying, and sitting

This is rehabilitation that sticks.

When to Seek Help (Hint: Sooner Is Better)

Pelvic floor dysfunction is not a condition to “wait and see.” Early care leads to faster recovery and less long-term strain. You should book a pelvic floor physiotherapy assessment if you:

Leak when you laugh, sneeze, jump, or run

Feel pelvic pressure or heaviness

Have painful intercourse

Struggle with constipation or urgency

Have been pregnant (recently or not)

Are approaching or experiencing menopause

Are returning to exercise after injury or birth

The Real Truth: You Can Heal

Pelvic floor dysfunction isn’t something you just live with—and it’s not a reflection of your strength or worth. It’s a sign your body needs informed, skilled support.

At YourFormSux, we help women move from frustration and embarrassment to empowerment and confidence with personalized pelvic floor care grounded in science and compassion.

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