Mistake #1: Holding Your Breath (Or Bracing Like a Statue)
The problem: Breath holding increases intra-abdominal pressure, often forcing pressure down. That can worsen leaks, heaviness, or pain.
The fix: Use the piston.
- Exhale on effort: Perform the lift/squeeze on a gentle, continuous exhale (you should be able to whisper a few words).
- Inhale to release: Give the pelvic floor time to lengthen. Long releases are part of the rep.
Learn the mechanics on Breathing for Pelvic Floor Exercises and reinforce with our How to Do Kegels Correctly cues.
Mistake #2: Squeezing Everything (Glutes, Abs, Inner Thighs)
The problem: Over-recruiting neighboring muscles hides poor pelvic floor activation and teaches the wrong pattern.
The fix: Sit on a firm surface. Without clenching the butt or inner thighs, imagine stopping urine and holding back gas at the same time. You should feel a subtle lift inside the pelvis—no outer ab “bulge.” Check the skill in the Beginners 7-Day Plan.
Mistake #3: Going Too Hard, Too Soon
The problem: Max-effort squeezing often backfires—fatigue, tightness, and worse symptoms.
The fix: Start with 30–40% effort. Progress to 50–60% as control improves. Reserve higher efforts for advanced, integrated patterns (see Beyond Kegels).
Mistake #4: Skipping the Release
The problem: Muscles never fully letting go can create a “stuck ON” state—reduced arousal, pain with penetration, urgency, or constipation.
The fix: Make the release longer than the hold at first (e.g., 5s hold, 10s release). Add a 60–90 second down-training block at the end (child’s pose, rib breathing). If intimacy is a goal, read Intimacy: The Science Explained.
Mistake #5: No Endurance… or No Quick Reflexes
The problem: Only training one quality. You need endurance (all-day support) and power (quick cough/sneeze control).
The fix: Program both:
- Endurance holds: 8–10 seconds on exhale, 8–10 seconds release x 8–10 reps.
- Quick flicks: 2–3 sets x 8–12 reps (1s up/1s release).
Use How to Stop Leaking When You Cough or Sneeze for timing practice.
Mistake #6: Training Only Lying Down Forever
The problem: Great for beginners, but real life is upright and moving.
The fix: Progress to sitting → standing → functional: sit-to-stand, hinges, squats, carries. Breathe through movement. For a blueprint, see Advanced Pelvic Floor Exercises and the Postpartum 12-Week Plan for graded exposure.
Mistake #7: Ignoring Posture and Rib Stack
The problem: Flared ribs and a tilted pelvis compress the back line and overload the pelvic floor.
The fix: “Tall crown, soft ribs.” Imagine your ribs stacked over pelvis, weight even on sitz bones, back of the neck long. Breathe 360°—front, sides, and back.
Mistake #8: Pushing Through Symptoms
The problem: Heaviness, bulge, pain, or leaks signal overload.
The fix: Back off intensity or position, choose gravity-reduced setups, and double down on breath-led releases. Review Prolapse strategies and Pregnancy modifications if relevant.
Mistake #9: Random Dosing (No Plan)
The problem: Inconsistent stimulus = inconsistent results.
The fix: Use structured blocks:
- Weeks 1–4: Skill + endurance (8–10 holds) most days.
- Weeks 5–8: Add quick flicks and one standing session.
- Weeks 9–12: Integrate with hinges/squats/carries 2–3 days/week.
For a full roadmap, keep the Pillar Guide open.
Mistake #10: Forgetting Bowel Mechanics
The problem: Straining overrides all your careful training.
The fix: Hydration, fiber, footstool on the toilet, long exhales, no breath holding. If constipation persists, discuss with your clinician.
A Simple 4-Week Reset Plan
Week 1:
- Breath practice daily (3–5 min).
- 8 x 5s holds (10s releases) + 2 x 8 quick flicks.
Week 2:
- 10 x 8s holds (8–10s releases) + 3 x 8 quick flicks.
- One sitting session.
Week 3:
- Maintain volume; add standing holds (5 x 6s) and sit-to-stand with exhale + lift.
Week 4:
- Keep holds/flicks; add hinge and squat to box (see Advanced page).
- Symptom-free? Add light carries.
Keep the Ecosystem Connected
- Pillar: Ultimate Guide to Pelvic Floor Exercises
- Technique: How to Do Kegels Correctly
- Breath engine: The Role of Breathing in Pelvic Floor Exercises
- Beginners: Pelvic Floor Exercises for Beginners
- Advanced: Beyond Kegels
- Postpartum: Postpartum Pelvic Floor Exercises
- Men: Pelvic Floor Exercises for Men
- Pregnancy: Safe Pelvic Floor Exercises for Every Stage of Pregnancy
- Prolapse: Pelvic Floor Exercises for Prolapse
- Intimacy: Pelvic Floor Exercises for Intimacy