When most people think about building strength, they imagine the “mirror” muscles… the biceps, quads, or abs. But one of the most important muscle groups for functional and quality of life is hidden from view: the pelvic floor. These muscles play a vital role in core stability, bladder and bowel control, sexual function, and overall movement performance.


How Common Is Pelvic Floor Dysfunction?

Pelvic floor issues are far more common than you might realize.


What Are Pelvic Floor Contractions?

The pelvic floor is a hammock-like group of muscles strung across the base of your pelvis. A pelvic floor contraction,commonly referred to as Kegels, is the intentional tightening and lifting of these muscles, in order to isolate, activate, and strengthen them (just as a bicep curl strengthens your bicep).

An important note, a contraction is not about squeezing as hard as you can—it’s about controlled activation and relaxation. Just like any muscle, the pelvic floor needs both strength and flexibility to function well.


Why Are They Important?

Pelvic floor contractions help with:


How to Perform a Pelvic Floor Contraction

  1. Start gently: Inhale to relax. As you exhale, gently lift and contract the pelvic floor muscles, lifting from front to back.

  2. Hold and release: Hold the contraction for 3–5 seconds, then fully relax for the same amount of time. Repeat for 10 reps, 3-5x/day.

When to Seek Help

If you’re unsure whether you’re contracting the right muscles, or if you struggle with leakage, heaviness, pelvic pain, or postpartum recovery, working with a physical therapist can make all the difference. Many people don’t realize they’re actually bearing down instead of lifting, or they may need relaxation techniques before strengthening.

At Altus Performance Physical Therapy, we specialize in helping active adults and new mothers restore optimal pelvic floor health so you can move, perform, and live without limitations.