The Truth About Pelvic Floor Exercises After Pregnancy

The Truth About Pelvic Floor Exercises After Pregnancy reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

After giving birth, your body undergoes profound changes—some visible, many hidden. One area that often gets overlooked is the pelvic floor. You might hear people say, “Just do your Kegels,” or get vague advice from well-meaning friends or blogs. But here’s the truth: pelvic floor recovery after pregnancy is more nuanced than just squeezing your muscles a few times a day.

At YourFormSux, we work with women across Canada who are navigating postpartum healing—many of whom feel unsure about what’s normal, what’s not, and what their bodies really need. This blog breaks down the truth about pelvic floor exercises after pregnancy and how physiotherapy can guide you through it safely and effectively.

Your Pelvic Floor After Birth: What Really Happens

Whether you had a vaginal delivery or C-section, pregnancy places enormous strain on your pelvic floor muscles. These muscles stretch to support the growing baby, and in vaginal births, may also experience tearing, trauma, or nerve disruption. In C-sections, abdominal and pelvic support systems are also disrupted, altering core stability.

Postpartum symptoms can include:

Urinary incontinence

Pressure or heaviness in the pelvis

Pain during intercourse

Constipation or incomplete emptying

Low back, hip, or tailbone pain

A feeling of “disconnect” from your core

Pelvic floor exercises can help—but only if done correctly and at the right time.

Myth #1: Just Do Kegels and You’ll Be Fine

The truth:

Kegels are often the first (and only) advice women receive. But they’re not a blanket solution. If your pelvic floor muscles are tight or uncoordinated, blindly doing Kegels can lead to increased tension, more pain, or even worsening of symptoms.

What you need instead:

A professional assessment to determine:

Whether your pelvic floor needs to relax, strengthen, or retrain

How your breathing, posture, and core engagement are affecting recovery

What movements or daily habits might be delaying healing

Myth #2: You Can Start Exercises Right After Giving Birth

The truth:

Every woman’s postpartum journey is different. Jumping into exercises too soon—especially high-intensity workouts or unsupported core work—can create setbacks.

What’s safe:

Pelvic floor physiotherapy provides a progressive plan that starts with:

Gentle diaphragmatic breathing

Awareness of pelvic floor engagement and release

Reconnection to your deep core

Body mechanics for lifting, carrying, and feeding your baby safely

From there, your therapist guides you through more advanced movements as your body regains strength and stability.

Myth #3: If You Had a C-Section, You Don’t Need Pelvic Floor Rehab

The truth:

C-section deliveries avoid vaginal trauma, but the pelvic floor is still heavily impacted by pregnancy. Also, core weakness, scar adhesions, and compensatory movement patterns can all affect pelvic function.

Post-C-section therapy includes:

Gentle scar tissue mobilization

Restoring core-pelvic floor connection

Breathing and posture work

Guidance on when and how to reintroduce movement

Myth #4: You’ll Know if You’re Doing It Wrong

The truth:

Pelvic floor engagement is subtle. Many women think they’re doing exercises correctly when they’re actually bearing down instead of lifting up—or gripping surrounding muscles instead of the pelvic floor.

How physiotherapy helps:

A pelvic floor physiotherapist provides real-time feedback, helping you learn:

Where the pelvic floor is located

How to contract and relax it without compensating

How to integrate the pelvic floor into everyday tasks like lifting your baby, standing up, or coughing

Myth #5: If You Don’t Have Symptoms, You Don’t Need to Do Anything

The truth:

Even if you’re symptom-free, your body still underwent major changes. Ignoring pelvic floor health now could lead to issues later—especially when you return to exercise, lift heavy objects, or go through menopause.

What prevention looks like:

Building a strong core-pelvic floor connection

Maintaining proper posture and breath control

Learning safe movement mechanics early

Staying ahead of prolapse or leakage risks

The Role of Physiotherapy in Postpartum Recovery

At YourFormSux, we don’t offer cookie-cutter exercises. We assess your body, your birth experience, and your symptoms. Then we build a plan that evolves as you heal.

A typical recovery journey might include:

Weeks 0–6: Breathwork, rest strategies, light reconnection techniques

Weeks 6–12: Gentle movement, posture support, awareness training

Months 3+: Progressive strengthening, fitness reintegration, symptom management

Beyond: Maintenance, injury prevention, confidence in daily activity

Every step is focused on function, safety, and confidence—so you’re not guessing or pushing your body before it’s ready.

Final Thoughts

Pelvic floor exercises are important—but only when they’re personalized, purposeful, and paired with expert support. The postpartum body is powerful, but it deserves care, not pressure. If you’ve been doing Kegels with no results, feeling confused, or unsure what your body needs—you’re not alone, and you’re not doing anything wrong.

With pelvic floor physiotherapy at YourFormSux, you’ll get real answers, respectful care, and a plan that actually helps your body heal.

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