Let’s talk about your pelvic floor.
The bowl of muscles and bones located at the bottom of your seat, connected to your sacrum and your hipbones, that supports your bladder, uterus, vagina, and rectum. It’s important for so many things: sitting at your desk, standing in line, and sexual pleasure. But it’s often misaligned, which can cause severe physical tension.
Enter: the squat, which helps keep your pelvic floor in good shape.
How your pelvic floor works
If the pelvic floor isn’t stretched properly, it can cause lower neck and back pain, shifting into a strange position that contracts the muscles. Frequently, we don’t even know we’re doing it. Our individual tendencies differ over time, as we carry larger bags or walk longer distances, or even as we have different sexual partners.
The pelvic floor helps create sexual pleasure. By tilting the pelvis upwards, hips towards the shoulder blades, women can receive greater internal and external stimulation. Through learning how to identify the pelvis and contract the pelvic floor, many women achieve greater orgasms.