How to Incorporate Pelvic Floor Exercises into Your Routine explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.
Pelvic floor health is essential to your overall well-beingaffecting everything from bladder and bowel control to core strength, sexual function, and postural stability. Yet, its an area of the body that is often neglected or misunderstood until symptoms like leaking, pelvic pain, or discomfort during intimacy emerge.
The good news? Pelvic floor exercises are simple, effective, and easy to integrate into your daily routineonce you know how to do them properly. Whether you’re recovering postpartum, navigating menopause, or simply looking to build core strength, creating a consistent pelvic floor practice can significantly improve your quality of life.
In this blog, well explain how to incorporate pelvic floor exercises into your day, what mistakes to avoid, and how to make the most of this powerful form of self-care.
What Are Pelvic Floor Exercises?
Pelvic floor exercisescommonly known as Kegelsinvolve consciously contracting and relaxing the muscles at the base of the pelvis. These muscles support the bladder, uterus or prostate, rectum, and spine. Like any muscle group, they require regular conditioning to stay functional and responsive.
But pelvic floor training isnt just about doing random squeezes. A targeted, coordinated approach is far more effective, especially when integrated with your breath and posture.
Signs You Might Benefit from Pelvic Floor Exercises
Pelvic floor training is beneficial for everyone, but especially if you experience:
Bladder leakage with coughing, sneezing, or exercise
A constant urge to urinate
Difficulty holding in gas or stool
Pelvic pressure or a sensation of heaviness
Painful intercourse or pelvic pain
Weak core, lower back pain, or instability
Postpartum recovery or menopausal pelvic changes
Whether youre dealing with symptoms or looking to prevent them, regular pelvic floor exercise can make a real difference.
Step-by-Step: How to Do a Proper Pelvic Floor Contraction
Before incorporating these exercises into your day, it’s important to learn how to activate your pelvic floor correctly.
Get into a relaxed positionlying on your back, side, or seated with good posture.
Inhale gently, allowing your belly and pelvic floor to expand.
As you exhale, gently lift and contract the pelvic floor musclesas if you’re trying to stop the flow of urine or lift a blueberry with the vagina or anus.
Hold for 35 seconds (or as long as feels comfortable).
Fully release the contraction as you inhale again.
Repeat 810 times, once or twice daily.
Make sure youre not squeezing your glutes, holding your breath, or clenching your jawthese are common compensation patterns that reduce the effectiveness of the exercise.
If youre unsure whether youre activating correctly, consider seeing a pelvic floor physiotherapist for assessment and guidance.
How to Add Pelvic Floor Exercises to Your Daily Routine
Incorporating pelvic floor exercises doesnt have to be time-consuming or overwhelming. In fact, the key to success is consistency over intensity. Heres how to seamlessly make them part of your everyday life:
1. Habit Stack with Existing Routines
Link pelvic floor exercises to things you already do daily:
During morning or bedtime routines (brushing teeth, skincare)
While sitting at a red light or commuting
During a coffee break or lunch
While doing dishes or laundry
After feeding your baby or putting your child to sleep
Pairing exercises with consistent cues helps form a lasting habit without needing extra time in your schedule.
2. Incorporate with Breathwork or Meditation
The pelvic floor naturally moves with the breath. Use this connection to integrate pelvic floor contractions into:
Diaphragmatic breathing sessions
Yoga or stretching routines
Mindfulness or meditation practice
By linking your breath and pelvic floor consciously, you train both the physical and nervous systems for better relaxation, control, and coordination.
3. Train with Movement
Once youve mastered basic contractions, begin integrating them into everyday movements:
Engage your pelvic floor during squats, lunges, or lifting
Coordinate contractions when standing from a chair or bed
Use breath and pelvic engagement while walking or exercising
This functional training teaches your pelvic floor to support your body during real-life activities, not just in isolation.
4. Set Gentle Reminders
Use your phone, sticky notes, or a wellness app to set friendly reminders. A simple prompt like Lift & Release or Breathe + Engage can help you stay on track, especially in the early days of building the habit.
5. Avoid Overtraining
More isnt always better. Overtraining the pelvic floorespecially without proper relaxationcan lead to tension and dysfunction. Your physiotherapist may also recommend relaxation-focused exercises if your pelvic floor is overactive or tight.
A balanced pelvic floor is one that knows when to contract and when to let go. Coordination, not just strength, is the goal.
What If Youre Not Seeing Results?
Pelvic floor function is nuanced. If youve been doing exercises consistently but arent seeing improvementor if your symptoms worsenits important to seek professional help.
A pelvic floor physiotherapist can assess:
Whether youre activating the right muscles
If theres underlying tension, weakness, or nerve involvement
Whether internal manual therapy or additional support is needed
How to modify your routine for your unique body
Getting the right guidance can fast-track your results and give you long-term confidence in your pelvic health.
Why This Matters for Your Overall Wellness
Pelvic floor health is not just about preventing leaks. Its about feeling strong, stable, and empowered in your body. When your pelvic floor is functioning well, you move more freely, breathe more fully, and live with greater comfortphysically and emotionally.
By incorporating simple pelvic floor exercises into your routine, you’re investing in:
Core and spine support
Bladder and bowel confidence
Comfortable intimacy
Posture and balance
Long-term health across every life stage
Final Thoughts: Strength Starts Within
You dont need fancy equipment or long workouts to support your pelvic floor. You just need awareness, consistency, and the willingness to tune in to your body.
At YourFormSux, we believe pelvic health is foundationalnot optional. Whether youre just getting started or looking for expert guidance, our team is here to help you move forward with knowledge, support, and care.





