The Truth About Pelvic Floor Recovery After Childbirth reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Childbirth is a transformative eventphysically, emotionally, and hormonally. While much attention is given to a newborns well-being, the mothers recovery, especially of the pelvic floor, often takes a backseat. Yet this group of deep core muscles plays a central role in continence, posture, sexual health, spinal support, and overall movement efficiency. The truth is, pelvic floor recovery doesnt automatically happen with rest, and many postpartum women are left with lingering symptoms that could have been managed effectively through physiotherapy.
At YourFormSux (YFS), we help women across Canada understand that pelvic floor recovery is not just about bouncing backit’s about rebuilding strength, alignment, and confidence from the inside out. Heres what every woman should know about healing her pelvic floor after childbirth.
What Happens to the Pelvic Floor During Childbirth?
The pelvic floor is a sling of muscles at the base of the pelvis that supports the bladder, uterus, and rectum. During pregnancy, these muscles stretch and bear the weight of a growing uterus. During vaginal delivery, they undergo additional strain as they expand to allow the babys passage. Even in C-sections, the pelvic floor is affected due to pregnancy-related pressure and abdominal incisions that alter core function and postural control.
This can lead to:
Weakened or overstretched muscles
Pelvic organ prolapse
Urinary or fecal incontinence
Pelvic pain or pressure
Reduced sexual sensation or discomfort
Lower back or hip instability
Left unaddressed, these issues can persist for years.
Myth: Everything Will Go Back to Normal on Its Own
Reality: While some women experience spontaneous improvement, many require guided rehabilitation to fully recover function. Just as you wouldnt expect a torn hamstring to heal without rehab, the same logic applies to the pelvic floor. Physiotherapy helps realign the pelvis, retrain the deep core, and restore muscle coordinationespecially important if you had tearing, stitches, episiotomy, or forceps/vacuum-assisted delivery.
The Link Between Posture and Pelvic Floor Recovery
Postural alignment deeply influences pelvic floor healing. During pregnancy, the growing belly often leads to anterior pelvic tilt, excessive lumbar curve, and postural compensation. If these patterns remain postpartum, the pelvic floor may stay in a shortened or lengthened position, disrupting function.
Physiotherapists address:
Pelvic tilt and alignment issues
Breathing mechanics (important for core pressure management)
Spinal posture while sitting, standing, and feeding the baby
Movement patterns like bending, lifting, and walking
Without correcting these foundations, kegels alone wont provide the desired outcome.
When to Start Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Postpartum
Most women can begin gentle pelvic floor rehabilitation as early as 6 weeks postpartum, depending on their delivery and healing status. Physiotherapists start with a full-body assessment, not just an internal exam, to evaluate how your muscles coordinate and compensate.
Common goals in early recovery include:
Reducing pain or pressure
Restoring bladder and bowel control
Improving mobility and circulation
Reconnecting breath with core activation
Building the endurance to handle everyday tasks
If cleared for internal work, deeper muscle retraining and manual therapy may follow.
Why Kegels Arent One-Size-Fits-All
Kegels are often touted as the ultimate postpartum solution, but not all women need themand doing them incorrectly can worsen tension. Many women present with overactive pelvic floor muscles that are tight and unable to relax properly. These muscles need lengthening and down-training, not repeated contractions.
A pelvic floor physiotherapist will assess:
Whether the muscles are weak, tight, or uncoordinated
If your breath supports your core or creates downward pressure
How your pelvic floor responds to loads like lifting your baby
A personalized plan will include more than just Kegelsit may involve hip mobility drills, spinal realignment, breathwork, and glute strengthening to restore full-body balance.
The Role of Physiotherapy in Long-Term Recovery
Healing the pelvic floor doesnt stop at 6 weeks or even 3 months. Many women dont feel normal for 6 to 12 months postpartumsometimes longer if issues are left unaddressed. Physiotherapy is essential for long-term recovery and prevention of future dysfunctions like prolapse, diastasis recti, or chronic back pain.
At YFS, we focus on:
Full pelvic and postural re-education
Functional movement retraining (lifting, squatting, pushing)
Managing pelvic organ prolapse symptoms
Returning safely to running or strength training
Addressing scar tissue and restoring pelvic mobility
We also educate new mothers on body mechanics for breastfeeding, babywearing, and household choresoften overlooked sources of strain.
Signs You May Need Postpartum Pelvic Floor Support
Even if your doctor says youve healed well, you should seek physiotherapy if you notice:
Leaking urine during sneezing, coughing, or exercise
A feeling of heaviness or dragging in the pelvic area
Painful intercourse or internal pressure
Difficulty holding gas or bowel movements
Low back, hip, or tailbone pain that worsens with activity
These are common but not normal signs. With early intervention and the right physiotherapy plan, most women can regain full function.
Pelvic Floor Healing Is Not OptionalIts Foundational
Postpartum care should never stop at the six-week checkup. Pelvic floor recovery is essential to your strength, energy, comfort, and confidencewhether youre planning to return to sport, carry another child, or simply move through daily life with ease.
At YourFormSux, were committed to supporting women across Canada with expert pelvic health physiotherapy, personalized recovery plans, and whole-body strategies that empower long-term healing. No shame. No guesswork. Just real results.





