The Truth About Pelvic Floor Exercises After Birth reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
After giving birth, many women are told the same thing: Just do your Kegels. Whether its from a doctor, a friend, or a fitness app, the advice is nearly universal. But what if the advice, though well-meaning, misses the mark? What if pelvic floor exercises after childbirth are not as straightforward as they seem?
At YourFormSux (YFS), we work with women across Canada who are navigating the postpartum periodnot just physically, but mentally and emotionally. We see the frustration of trying the right exercises without results. We see the confusion when symptoms get worse instead of better. And most of all, we see how myth-driven recovery advice delays healing.
In this blog, were separating fact from fiction so you can rebuild pelvic floor health after birth the right wayrealistically, safely, and with full-body support.
Myth #1: You Should Start Kegels Right After Delivery
The myth:
The moment your baby is born, its time to start squeezing those pelvic floor muscles.
The truth:
Not every postpartum body is ready for Kegels. After birth, your muscles may be stretched, bruised, or overactive (yes, tight muscles can still leak). Starting strengthening exercises too earlyespecially without assessing how your pelvic floor is functioningcan cause more harm than good.
What to do instead:
Start with gentle breathing exercises, awareness, and rest. At YFS, we guide new mothers through early-stage recovery using diaphragmatic breathing and postural support before any active strengthening begins. Once healing is underway and a physiotherapy assessment is done, exercises are introduced based on your individual needs.
Myth #2: If Youre Not Leaking, Your Pelvic Floor Must Be Fine
The myth:
No symptoms mean no dysfunction.
The truth:
Some dysfunctions dont show up right away. You might have poor coordination, tension, or muscle imbalances that dont cause leakagebut still interfere with core strength, posture, or comfort. These can lead to pain during intimacy, back problems, or prolapse down the road.
What to do instead:
Even without obvious symptoms, a postpartum pelvic floor assessment is one of the best ways to protect long-term health. Physiotherapists can catch small issues before they become major ones and guide you in restoring full function.
Myth #3: All Postpartum Women Need the Same Exercises
The myth:
A standard set of pelvic floor and core workouts works for everyone.
The truth:
No two postpartum recoveries are alike. Vaginal delivery, C-section, tearing, diastasis recti, or prolonged labor all affect your recovery differently. Some women have weak pelvic floors; others are overly tight. Some have prolapse; others have back pain. A one-size-fits-all routine can miss the markor worsen your symptoms.
What to do instead:
Get a personalized recovery plan. At YourFormSux, we take into account your birth history, symptoms, lifestyle, and movement patterns. Whether you need strengthening, soft tissue release, postural retraining, or all threewe build a plan that works for your body.
Myth #4: You Just Need to Strengthen Your Pelvic Floor
The myth:
Squeeze more. Hold longer. Build more strength.
The truth:
Strength is only one part of pelvic floor function. Equally important are coordination, relaxation, timing, and integration with the rest of your core. If your pelvic floor is constantly clenched, strength training wont fix itit may worsen tension, pain, or urinary urgency.
What to do instead:
Focus on functional movement, breathing, and posture. Our physiotherapy approach integrates pelvic floor recovery with ribcage alignment, diaphragmatic breathwork, and core coordinationhelping the entire system work together, not in isolation.
Myth #5: Pelvic Floor Exercises Will Fix Everything Postpartum
The myth:
As long as you do your pelvic floor exercises, the rest will take care of itself.
The truth:
Pelvic floor dysfunction often exists alongside other postural and muscular imbalances: a tilted pelvis, poor glute activation, weak abdominals, or shallow breathing. Focusing only on the pelvic floor ignores the bigger pictureand limits your recovery.
What to do instead:
Think whole-body healing. A postpartum physiotherapist doesnt just give you exercisesthey help retrain your breathing, movement patterns, lifting mechanics, and even how you sit, feed your baby, or carry a car seat. Its about reprogramming your body for function, not just fixing one area.
Myth #6: If You Delivered by C-Section, You Dont Need Pelvic Floor Exercises
The myth:
No vaginal delivery means no pelvic floor impact.
The truth:
Pregnancy itself puts pressure on the pelvic floor for nine months. C-sections also affect core stability and breathing, which directly influence pelvic floor function. You may not have perineal trauma, but you still need to restore coordination and support.
What to do instead:
Whether vaginal or surgical, postpartum is postpartum. We tailor physiotherapy care to your delivery type while still addressing the entire core and pelvic system.
Real Postpartum Recovery Takes Timeand the Right Guidance
Pelvic floor healing is not linear, and it doesnt fit neatly into a 6-week timeline. At YourFormSux, we help women across Canada recover at their own pace, with:
In-depth pelvic assessments
Education about whats normal vs. whats treatable
Postural support and real-life movement coaching
Gentle progression from breathwork to strength
Integration of pelvic floor with full-body strength
Final Thoughts: Its Not Just About the ExercisesIts About Understanding Your Body
Pelvic floor exercises after birth can be powerfulbut only when theyre done with precision, personalization, and patience. Forget the myths that tell you to just do Kegels or that leaking is the price of motherhood. The truth is, you can healand you dont have to figure it out alone.
At YourFormSux, were here to support you with evidence-based postpartum physiotherapy thats tailored to real women, real lives, and real bodies. Whether youre six weeks or six months postpartum, your recovery mattersand it starts with facts, not fear.






