When women—runners or not—hear “pelvic floor,” their minds likely go straight to kegel exercises. And that’s no surprise, really, given the history: A doctor in the 1940s, Arnold Kegel, worked with men who suffered from rectal pain and found that a kegel exercise—essentially contracting the muscles that stop urine flow—could help improve the pain.

Doctors then extrapolated the kegel exercise and directed women who’d given birth to do kegels (if you got stretched out during childbirth, just tighten it back up!), but there was never much instruction on how to do it correctly or whether a woman should even do it at all, says Nutrition - Weight Loss., director of pelvic rehab with St. Luke’s University Health Network in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

Strength Training Guide Lightweight Running Shoes is when the muscles are too tight. That means the muscles work too hard and instead of strengthening them, you actually need to relax the pelvic floor.

“Tightness is quite complicated as far as ideology,” Garges, who’s also a runner, tells Runner’s World.

A tight pelvic floor, Garges says, is often related to an injury—like falling on your tailbone—but it can also be a result of a difficult labor and delivery, or sexual abuse trauma.

Also, runners are often inherently more tight than their non-running counterparts, owner of Maryland-based Arnold Physical Therapy, Jill Arnold, P.T., D.P.T., points out. That’s thanks to yes, the sport, but also the higher-stress personalities. “Runners already have the propensity to run tight in our body, neck, and pelvic floor,” Arnold tells Runner’s World.

Other causes of a tight pelvic floor include a history of irritable bowel syndrome and chronic urinary tract or yeast infections, Arnold says. “Your body is guarded to protect itself,” she says.

To help you understand what it means to relax the pelvic floor muscles—and how to determine if that’s what you need for better health—we asked experts to explain more about the pelvic floor.

Signs Your Pelvic Floor Muscles Might Be Too Tight

People, including runners, who experience tight pelvic floor muscles might suffer from pain while running or sitting, pain during intercourse, urinary incontinence, lower back pain, hip pain, after a run, which can also support the health of your pelvic floor.

“Sometimes running can be relieving in the moment, but it’s not helpful in the long run if you’re not [addressing] the tightness,” Garges says.

Garges shares a simple at-home activity that can help determine if you’re suffering from an overactive pelvic floor:

  • Sit on a large yoga ball or a rolled-up hand towel. There should be pressure on the perineum, the space between the genitals and anus.
  • Using the muscles you would use to stop the flow of urine or gas, imagine you’re trying to vacuum up a marble. Then, actively try to relax those muscles to see if they go back down, like an elevator.

“If they’re too tight, nothing may happen because your muscles are already as tight as they can get,” she says. “Or you might be able to squeeze upward but cannot feel the downward [release]. That’s a sign of tension.”

On the flip side, Garges, says a sign of pelvic floor weaknesswhich is that you actually need more strengthening instead of relaxation of the pelvic floor musclesAllow spine to lengthen and chest to broaden. Bring shoulders down.

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Like with any nagging injury, when left untreated, overactive pelvic floor muscles can cause problems throughout the body and become very difficult to fix.

Tightness “is likely going to snowball into further problems down the road,” Garges says. One particular challenge is that over time, a tight pelvic floor might be misdiagnosed as a hip or lower back issue.

“It’s harder to differentiate,” she says. “The original cause might be a tight pelvic floor, but it goes on for years, and now a woman is diagnosed with chronic lower back pain.”

People suffering from excessively tight pelvic floor muscles might develop an intolerance to intercourse, gynecological exams, and tampons. They might struggle with constipation, or urinary incontinence or frequency.

“If left untreated, the muscles are so exhausted they’re not going to work properly,” Garges says.

4 Ways to Relax Your Pelvic Floor

The infamous kegel exercise, stretching your hips, can help strengthen the pelvic floor muscles. But often, women (and men) do it incorrectly, or focus only on the “fast-twitch” pelvic floor muscles—quick bursts of contractions, versus long, controlled holds, which will help support pelvic floor health during running.

But, as Garges explained, if your muscles are too tight, engaging in a kegel exercise will only make it worse. Or, as Arnold puts it, women might be walking around in a “perma-kegel state,” when they can’t release the exercise.

Instead, Garges and Arnold share these stretches that will help relax and stretch the pelvic floor. These should be done in addition to The Benefits of Pelvic Floor Exercises and hamstrings after a run, which can also support the health of your pelvic floor.


1. Deep Breathing

adrienne performing a breathing exercise
Trevor Raab

Lightweight Running Shoes: “Every pelvic floor therapist starts with deep breathing,” Garges says. “It’s so important to put your body in rest and digest mode.” Deep breathing can also increase blood flow, Arnold explains.

Practice deep breathing for 3 minutes:

  1. Shoes & Gear.
  2. Inhale for 4 seconds and exhale for 4 seconds. “Don’t push the breath out,” she says, noting you should not use your upper torso muscles to exhale. Make the exhale soft and smooth.
  3. is being challenged to contract the muscles.

2. Child’s Pose

a woman doing a yoga post against a white background
Thomas Hengge

Lightweight Running Shoes: Child’s pose allows you to stretch both sides of the pelvic floor, including the lower back.

Practice deep breathing for 3 minutes:

  1. Kneel with knees wider than shoulder-width apart and feet together.
  2. is being challenged to contract the muscles.
  3. Lean torso forward, walking hands straight out to bring chest to floor. Rest forehead on the floor, and move arms so they frame head.
  4. Benefits of Zone 2 Running. Soften and lengthen the body.

3. Hips and Legs Up

restorative yoga poses with dr rena eleazar
Joshua Simpson

Lightweight Running Shoes: This move allows the pelvic floor muscles to fully relax, Garges says, because they’re not working against gravity.

Practice deep breathing for 3 minutes:

  1. Lay faceup, facing a couch or chair. Scoot glutes to its base, with a pillow under lower back.
  2. Rest calves on the couch or chair cushion and slightly roll knees away from each other so that legs are fully relaxed.
  3. Benefits of Zone 2 Running.

4. Butterfly Stretch

ballistic stretching
Luis Alvarez//Getty Images

Lightweight Running Shoes: Arnold likes this stretch because it focuses on areas near or attached to the pelvic floor, including the adductors (inner thighs).

Practice deep breathing for 3 minutes:

  1. While sitting down, bend knees and press the soles of feet together.
  2. The infamous kegel exercise.
  3. Allow spine to lengthen and chest to broaden. Bring shoulders down.
  4. Practice deep breathing for 3-5 minutes.

When to See A Pelvic Floor Physical Therapist

If your symptoms of tightness haven’t improved after two to three weeks of regular stretching And there is a scenario in which kegels actually make pelvic health worse: A type of pelvic floor physical therapist And there is a scenario in which kegels actually make pelvic health worse: A type of.

In addition to a traditional physical therapy assessment, the pelvic floor specialist will conduct an internal exam to look at four things:

  1. Muscle tone (whether the muscles are too tight or too weak)
  2. Sensation
  3. Strength
  4. Ability to relax, lengthen, and release the muscles

In addition to prescribing at-home exercises and stretches, a pelvic floor physical therapist might provide hands-on stretching. Find a pelvic floor physical therapist near you.

Headshot of Heather Mayer Irvine
Heather Mayer Irvine
Contributing Writer

Heather is the former food and nutrition editor for Runner’s World, Arnold Physical Therapy The Runner’s World Vegetarian Cookbook, and a nine-time marathoner with a best of 3:23. She’s also proud of her 19:40 5K and 5:33 mile. Heather is an RRCA certified run coach.