The Truth Behind Pelvic Floor Health reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Pelvic floor health is one of the most essentialand most overlookedaspects of womens well-being. These muscles support your bladder, uterus, rectum, and spine, yet many women dont know how to properly care for them until something goes wrong. Whether its bladder leaks, pelvic heaviness, or pain during movement or intimacy, these symptoms are your bodys way of asking for supportnot silence.
At YourFormSux (YFS), we work with Canadian women to demystify pelvic health and provide personalized physiotherapy that works. If youve been wondering whats fact, whats fiction, and what you should actually be doing to protect your pelvic floor, this blog gives you the real answers.
Pelvic Floor Truth #1: These Muscles Are Part of Your Core
Many people think of the core as just the abs, but thats only part of the picture. Your pelvic floor is a foundational component of core strength. Along with your diaphragm, deep abdominal muscles, and back stabilizers, it helps regulate pressure, maintain balance, and support every movement you make.
What you should be doing:
Start thinking of your pelvic floor as part of a team. Work on coordinating breath, core, and pelvic floor with basic exercises like 360-degree breathing and posture training. You dont need to do hundreds of crunchesyou need movement patterns that promote balance and support.
Pelvic Floor Truth #2: Kegels Arent for Everyone
Youve likely been told that Kegels are the go-to for pelvic floor health. But the truth is, not all pelvic floors need strengthening. In fact, many women have overactive pelvic floorsmuscles that are too tight and unable to relax. In those cases, doing more Kegels can make things worse.
What you should be doing:
Instead of guessing, get assessed by a pelvic floor physiotherapist. Theyll determine whether you need to strengthen, release, coordinate, or all three. A tailored plan beats a one-size-fits-all fix every time.
Pelvic Floor Truth #3: Symptoms Are Common, Not Normal
If youve ever leaked urine when laughing or felt pain during sex, youre not alone. But being common doesnt make it normal. These are clear signs that your pelvic floor isnt functioning as it shouldand you dont have to accept them as just part of being a woman.
What you should be doing:
Pay attention to the signs. Leaking, pelvic pressure, urgency, constipation, and pain are all signals. Seek professional support earlyyoull heal faster and prevent more serious dysfunction later on.
Pelvic Floor Truth #4: Posture and Breathing Affect Your Pelvic Floor
Your daily posture and breathing patterns either support or stress your pelvic floor. Slouching, holding your breath during movement, or constantly bracing your core without proper alignment can disrupt your bodys pressure systems and strain pelvic tissues.
What you should be doing:
Practice neutral spine alignment, avoid clenching your abs throughout the day, and use diaphragmatic breathing to balance pressure. Breathing well isnt just calmingits therapeutic for your core and pelvic floor.
Pelvic Floor Truth #5: Its Never Too Late to Heal
Whether youve been dealing with symptoms for six months or sixteen years, recovery is always possible. The body is incredibly adaptive, especially with the right guidance and strategies.
What you should be doing:
Stop delaying care because you think its too late. Physiotherapy can help at any age, whether youre postpartum, peri-menopausal, or long past your last gym workout. Progress starts with one decision: seeking the right support.
Pelvic Floor Truth #6: Rest Is Just as Important as Strength
We often focus on making the pelvic floor stronger, but flexibility, relaxation, and coordination are just as important. Muscles that are constantly engaged cant respond properly when you need them mostwhether youre lifting a box or coughing.
What you should be doing:
Incorporate mobility and relaxation techniques into your routine, such as pelvic floor drops, supported stretches, and body scanning for tension. A well-functioning pelvic floor knows when to contract and when to let go.
Pelvic Floor Truth #7: Fitness Shouldnt Hurt Your Pelvic Health
Many women stop moving out of fear that exercise will make their symptoms worse. While some movements do need modification, avoiding exercise entirely can lead to more dysfunction.
What you should be doing:
Work with a physiotherapist to rebuild confidence in movement. Whether its returning to running or lifting weights, you can get strong again with pelvic-safe modifications, improved form, and gradual progressions.
The Real Solution: Individualized Care with a Physiotherapist
There is no magic device, universal workout, or single stretch that will fix your pelvic floor. True recovery comes from understanding your body, listening to its cues, and following a plan tailored to you.
At YFS, we:
Perform detailed pelvic assessments (internal only with consent)
Identify tension, weakness, or coordination issues
Design custom exercise and posture plans
Offer realistic, judgment-free education
Guide you step-by-step through healing and empowerment
Dont Wait for It to Get WorseTake Action Now
Pelvic floor dysfunction doesnt get better by ignoring itand it certainly doesnt disappear with myths and guesswork. Whether youre dealing with minor symptoms or major disruptions, you can feel better.
At YourFormSux, we help women reclaim their pelvic healthwithout shame, without guesswork, and without delay.





