Real Talk: How to Strengthen Your Pelvic Floor with Physiotherapy

Real Talk reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

If you’ve ever been told to “just do some Kegels” to fix pelvic floor issues, you’re not alone—and you’re also not getting the full story. Pelvic floor health is essential to everything from bladder and bowel control to core stability and sexual function. But strengthening it the right way means more than a set of generic exercises. It means working with your body, not against it, and understanding how every movement, breath, and posture pattern plays a role.

At YourFormSux (YFS), we take a real-world, evidence-informed approach to helping women across Canada strengthen their pelvic floors safely and effectively. Whether you’re postpartum, approaching menopause, or simply want better control and strength, this guide explains how physiotherapy offers the full picture—and the real results.

Why Pelvic Floor Strength Matters

Your pelvic floor is made up of layers of muscles that sit like a hammock at the base of your pelvis. These muscles support your organs (bladder, uterus, rectum), help you stay continent, stabilize your pelvis and spine, and contribute to sexual pleasure.

When the pelvic floor isn’t working properly, you might notice:

Leaking urine when laughing, sneezing, or exercising

Pressure or heaviness in the pelvic region

Pelvic pain or discomfort

Painful intercourse

Difficulty engaging your core during workouts

Constipation or incomplete emptying

But here’s what many don’t realize—strengthening isn’t always about doing more. It’s about doing it right.

The First Step: Assessment Before Exercise

Before any strengthening can begin, your pelvic floor needs to be assessed. Why? Because not all dysfunction is caused by weakness. In fact, many women have tight or overactive pelvic floors that need relaxation and coordination—not more tension.

At YFS, our physiotherapists use internal (if appropriate and consented) and external assessments to check:

Muscle tone and endurance

Voluntary contraction and relaxation ability

Coordination with the breath and core

Posture and alignment

Movement patterns and compensations

This foundation is critical to avoid doing the wrong exercises for your condition.

How Physiotherapy Strengthens Your Pelvic Floor

Here’s what real pelvic floor strengthening looks like in a physiotherapy setting:

1. Breath-Based Core Integration

The pelvic floor is part of your deep core system, working alongside your diaphragm, transverse abdominis, and deep spinal stabilizers. Breathing well is the starting point of pelvic floor health.

During inhalation, the pelvic floor relaxes. During exhalation, it gently lifts.

We train this connection before moving on to any active strengthening.

2. Postural Alignment

Poor posture—think anterior pelvic tilt, slouched shoulders, or a flared rib cage—alters how the pelvic floor engages. Realignment helps reduce excess pressure on the pelvic floor and ensures it can work effectively during movement.

Your physiotherapist will guide you to a neutral pelvis and teach body awareness so you can support the pelvic floor all day, not just during workouts.

3. Functional Strengthening

Once coordination and alignment are established, we build true strength using movement. This includes:

Modified bridges and squats with breath coordination

Core activation exercises that engage the pelvic floor naturally

Resistance training that supports pressure management

Glute and hip strengthening, which stabilizes the pelvis and offloads tension from the pelvic floor

You’ll never hear us say “just do 100 Kegels a day.” Instead, we’ll show you how to train smarter, not harder.

4. Gradual Load and Real-Life Application

Your pelvic floor doesn’t work in isolation—it supports you through lifting your child, carrying groceries, dancing, coughing, running, and sex. We train the muscles in these contexts with progressive challenges that reflect your goals.

Whether you’re returning to sport, preventing prolapse, or recovering after childbirth, your strengthening plan is built for your lifestyle.

Signs Your Pelvic Floor Is Getting Stronger

As you progress with physiotherapy, you may notice:

Improved bladder control

Reduced heaviness or discomfort

Stronger core engagement during workouts

Less urgency or frequency with urination

Greater ease and comfort during intimacy

Improved posture and movement efficiency

These gains are signs that your pelvic floor is not only stronger—but also better integrated with your body’s natural movement system.

The Myth of “More Is Better”

Doing more Kegels or squeezing harder isn’t the answer—in fact, it can create more dysfunction. True pelvic floor strength comes from:

Proper relaxation and release

Good coordination with the breath

Functional use during daily activities

Whole-body support from glutes, hips, and core

Physiotherapy teaches you how to do all of this in a way that’s safe, effective, and completely personalized.

Real Strength Starts With Real Support

If you’ve been struggling with symptoms, confused about what exercises to do, or unsure how to properly train your pelvic floor, you’re not alone—and you’re not stuck.

At YourFormSux, we help women discover a new kind of strength: grounded, intelligent, and connected. Whether you’re healing from birth, managing menopausal changes, or simply investing in your health, our pelvic health physiotherapists are here to guide you with clarity, respect, and results.

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