How to Prepare Your Pelvic Floor for Childbirth with Physiotherapy

How to Prepare Your Pelvic Floor for Childbirth with Physiotherapy explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.

Childbirth is one of the most physically demanding events a body can experience. While much of the focus during pregnancy is on the baby’s growth, expectant parents often overlook one critical area of preparation: the pelvic floor.

Your pelvic floor muscles are responsible for supporting your growing uterus, maintaining bladder and bowel control, and playing a direct role in the labour and delivery process. These muscles need to be strong, flexible, and responsive—not just for birth, but for your recovery afterward.

That’s where pelvic floor physiotherapy comes in. At YourFormSux, we help pregnant people across Toronto prepare for labour with a science-backed, body-aware approach that builds both physical readiness and confidence.

Here’s how physiotherapy can help you get your pelvic floor ready for childbirth—and why it matters more than you might think.

Why the Pelvic Floor Matters in Birth Preparation

Your pelvic floor is a group of muscles and connective tissues at the base of your pelvis. During pregnancy and delivery, these muscles:

Support the weight of your growing baby and uterus

Coordinate with the diaphragm to regulate intra-abdominal pressure

Adjust to changing posture and balance

Stretch and yield during vaginal delivery to allow the baby to pass through

Help stabilize the pelvis and spine as your body softens in preparation for birth

If the pelvic floor is too tight, weak, or uncoordinated, you may experience:

Pelvic pain or pressure

Difficulty pushing during labour

Increased risk of tearing or prolonged delivery

Slower postpartum recovery

Issues like leaking or heaviness after birth

Preparing the pelvic floor in advance helps you build awareness, mobility, and control—crucial for a smoother birth and recovery.

What Is Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy During Pregnancy?

Pelvic floor physiotherapy is a safe, individualized approach to preparing your body for childbirth. A trained physiotherapist evaluates your pelvic function and creates a plan to support:

Pelvic floor relaxation and mobility

Core and breath coordination

Labour and pushing strategies

Perineal preparation techniques

Postural support for pregnancy changes

Pain prevention and management

It’s not just about strengthening—it’s about learning to relax and release the pelvic floor just as much as engaging it.

How Physiotherapy Prepares You for Labour

Here’s how pelvic floor physiotherapy helps you get ready, physically and mentally, for the demands of childbirth:

1. Improves Awareness and Coordination

Most people don’t know how to identify or control their pelvic floor muscles. Your therapist will teach you how to:

Recognize what a contraction vs. a release feels like

Coordinate your pelvic floor with your breath and core

Adjust pelvic tension during different positions and movements

This awareness is crucial for pushing effectively and minimizing trauma.

2. Supports Optimal Breathing and Core Engagement

Pregnancy often disrupts normal breathing patterns. Shallow breathing, chest breathing, and holding tension can impact your pelvic floor’s ability to function.

Pelvic floor therapy helps retrain 360° ribcage breathing that:

Supports pressure management during pushing

Encourages pelvic floor expansion

Reduces fear-based breath-holding (Valsalva maneuver)

Helps you stay relaxed and grounded during contractions

3. Enhances Pelvic Mobility and Birth Positioning

A rigid, restricted pelvis makes labour harder. Your therapist can assess your pelvic mobility and help you:

Improve flexibility in your hips, sacrum, and spine

Find birthing positions that maximize space and reduce pressure

Use movement (squats, lunges, side-lying) to help labour progress

Mobility improves your ability to adapt during labour and helps baby find the optimal position.

4. Teaches Effective Pushing Techniques

Many people are told to “push like you’re having a bowel movement,” but without pelvic floor awareness, this can lead to excessive straining.

Physiotherapy teaches you:

How to push using your exhale and pelvic floor release

When to activate vs. relax muscles during different stages of labour

How to avoid bearing down unnecessarily, reducing risk of tearing or prolapse

Learning these techniques in advance makes the pushing phase more efficient and less stressful.

5. Introduces Perineal Massage and Scar Prep

Starting around 34–36 weeks, your therapist may teach you or your partner how to perform perineal massage—a technique that:

Increases tissue elasticity

Reduces fear of tearing

Improves confidence and connection with the birthing area

Familiarizes you with pelvic stretch sensations you’ll feel during birth

If you’ve had previous surgeries or scar tissue (from past tears, episiotomies, or C-sections), your therapist will help you address those areas as well.

When to Start Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy During Pregnancy

You can begin pelvic floor physiotherapy as early as the second trimester, though many start between 20–30 weeks for the most comprehensive preparation. However, even if you’re closer to your due date, a few sessions can still make a big difference.

Earlier sessions focus on:

Core and posture changes

Addressing pain or tension

Preventing incontinence or pelvic pressure

Later sessions focus on:

Labour and pushing strategies

Perineal preparation

Planning for postpartum recovery

Who Should Consider Prenatal Pelvic Floor Therapy?

Pelvic floor physiotherapy is helpful for all pregnant individuals, but especially if you:

Are preparing for your first birth

Have experienced pelvic pain, incontinence, or prolapse

Want to minimize the risk of perineal tearing

Are planning for a vaginal birth after C-section (VBAC)

Had a previous traumatic birth experience

Want to feel more informed and in control of the birth process

Post-Birth Benefits: Setting Up for a Smoother Recovery

Pelvic floor physiotherapy doesn’t end after labour. When you’ve already built awareness, mobility, and breath-core coordination during pregnancy, your postpartum recovery is faster and more effective.

Benefits include:

Easier core reactivation

Reduced risk of long-term leaking or heaviness

Less postpartum pain

Better tissue healing and scar mobility

Faster return to exercise and daily activity

At YourFormSux, we offer seamless care through pregnancy, birth, and beyond.

Final Thoughts: Birth Is a Demanding Event—Prepare Your Body for It

Preparing for childbirth isn’t just about hospital bags and baby gear—it’s about preparing your body to meet the physical demands of labour with awareness, strength, and flexibility.

Pelvic floor physiotherapy empowers you with the tools, knowledge, and confidence to approach birth from a place of readiness, not fear.

At YourFormSux, we’re here to support you every step of the way—from growing your baby to welcoming them into the world, and through your recovery on the other side.

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