Real Talk reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Pelvic floor health isnt just about doing a few Kegels and hoping for the best. Its a vital part of how your body moves, functions, and feelsyet its surrounded by confusion and misinformation. From social media soundbites to outdated assumptions, pelvic floor myths often do more harm than good. They lead to missed diagnoses, ineffective treatments, and women quietly suffering through issues that are highly treatable.
At YourFormSux, we believe that real pelvic health starts with real information. Physiotherapy isn’t just about rehabilitationit’s about clarity. It helps you understand your body, separate fact from fiction, and take control of your health with evidence-based support.
Lets break down the biggest pelvic floor myths and explain how physiotherapy can correct themonce and for all.
Myth #1: Pelvic floor problems only happen after pregnancy.
Reality: Pelvic floor dysfunction can affect anyone, at any ageeven if youve never been pregnant.
You might be dealing with symptoms because of high-impact exercise, chronic sitting, stress, posture habits, or previous abdominal surgeries. Pelvic floor dysfunction isnt exclusive to postpartum womenits about how your muscles are functioning, not just your reproductive history.
How physiotherapy helps: A pelvic health physiotherapist assesses your posture, breath mechanics, and movement patterns to identify the root causeno matter your life stage.
Myth #2: Everyone should be doing Kegels.
Reality: Kegels arent for everyoneand doing them the wrong way can make things worse.
Kegels are only effective when done correctly and only when the pelvic floor needs strengthening. Many people actually have tight or overactive pelvic floors, and contracting already-tense muscles can increase symptoms like pain, pressure, or urgency.
How physiotherapy helps: Your physiotherapist will evaluate whether your muscles need to release, coordinate, or strengthen. Theyll guide you with breath-based exercises and corrective movementnot generic reps.
Myth #3: Leaking during exercise is normal.
Reality: Its common, but not normaland its a sign of pelvic floor dysfunction.
Whether you leak while running, jumping, or sneezing, it means your core and pelvic floor aren’t managing pressure effectively. Ignoring this can lead to worsening symptoms over time.
How physiotherapy helps: By training your body to engage and release the pelvic floor in sync with your breath and movements, physiotherapy restores your bodys ability to manage intra-abdominal pressure naturally and effectively.
Myth #4: Pain during sex is something you just have to deal with.
Reality: Pain is a signalnot something to normalize.
Painful intercourse (also known as dyspareunia) often results from muscle tension, scar tissue, poor coordination, or hormonal changes affecting tissue health. It’s not in your head, and its not something you should silently accept.
How physiotherapy helps: A pelvic floor physiotherapist can assess for muscle tightness, teach you to relax those muscles, and guide you through strategies to reduce pain, increase comfort, and restore connection with your body.
Myth #5: If scans are clear, everything must be fine.
Reality: Functional pelvic floor issues don’t always show up on imaging.
Pelvic floor dysfunction involves how muscles contract, relax, and respond to pressure. These arent visible on X-rays or MRIs. You can experience real, debilitating symptoms even if scans come back normal.
How physiotherapy helps: Using hands-on assessment and movement observation, your physiotherapist evaluates tone, coordination, breathing, and alignmentrevealing issues that imaging often misses.
Myth #6: Pelvic health issues are only about bladder control.
Reality: Your pelvic floor affects your posture, core, digestion, breathing, and sexual health.
From low back pain to hip instability to constipation, many common symptoms trace back to pelvic floor imbalances. Ignoring them can cause a cascade of dysfunctions throughout your body.
How physiotherapy helps: By treating the pelvic floor in context with your entire body, physiotherapy offers whole-body healing, not symptom masking.
Myth #7: Doing more core workouts will fix pelvic problems.
Reality: Traditional core training can actually worsen pelvic floor dysfunction.
Sit-ups, planks, or heavy liftingif done without proper coordinationcan overload a weak or tight pelvic floor. This adds more pressure to a system thats already struggling.
How physiotherapy helps: Physiotherapists teach you how to breathe and engage your deep core in a way that supportsnot stressesyour pelvic floor. Its not about harder workoutsits about smarter movement.
Myth #8: Pain or leaking means surgery is inevitable.
Reality: Surgery is a last resortnot the starting point.
Many pelvic floor issues can be fully managedand even reversedwith conservative, non-invasive care. Physiotherapy is the first-line treatment for issues like incontinence, prolapse, and pelvic pain.
How physiotherapy helps: With customized treatment, education, and ongoing support, you can often resolve issues without surgery or medication.
Physiotherapy: The Myth-Buster You Didnt Know You Needed
Heres what happens when you work with a pelvic health physiotherapist at YourFormSux:
You learn whats really going on in your bodyand why
You stop doing the wrong exercises and start moving with purpose
You regain control over symptoms like pain, pressure, and leaking
You reconnect with your bodynot fear it
You build a strong, responsive pelvic floor that supports you in life, fitness, and recovery
Final Thoughts
Pelvic floor myths are more than just annoyingtheyre barriers to healing. The longer you believe them, the longer you wait to get the help you deserve.
Physiotherapy isnt about guessing. Its about evidence, body literacy, and empowerment. At YourFormSux, we meet you where you are, help you understand your body, and guide you through real, lasting transformation.





