{"id":1734,"date":"2021-05-28T13:07:14","date_gmt":"2021-05-28T13:07:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cms.mutusystem.com\/en-uk\/?p=1734"},"modified":"2025-07-21T10:18:57","modified_gmt":"2025-07-21T10:18:57","slug":"a-womans-pelvic-health-is-a-womans-mental-health","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mutusystem.com\/en-uk\/pelvic-floor\/a-womans-pelvic-health-is-a-womans-mental-health\/","title":{"rendered":"A Woman\u2019s Pelvic Health is a Woman\u2019s Mental Health"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\n\n\n\n
Why Pelvic Health Matters<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Our pelvic health is so important. When you think of mental health does pelvic health come to your mind as well? For most, it doesn’t, but it should.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
As mothers, our pelvic health goes hand in hand with our mental health. Our pelvic health, just like our mental health, is equally as vulnerable to trauma – the likes of which can leave us feeling completely alienated from our body, lacking any form of control. Think about it, we grow up looking after our body with the mission of keeping it safe from harm, safe from pain. We learn to love our body, cherish it, form a bond that could not be physically closer if we tried. Then consider childbirth and the toll this takes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Suddenly your postpartum body looks and feels completely different, unrecognisable almost, to the one you had spent years learning about. We feel out of control, powerless to complete even the simplest of tasks, all of which has a mental health impact of the same proportion to the physical struggles. <\/p>\n\n\n\n
Childbirth can bring about physical symptoms including urinary incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, painful sex, and diastasis recti. That\u2019s a bunch of technical words for; wetting yourself when you jump, laugh or sneeze, feeling like your insides might fall out when you go to the loo, sex that hurts, or a tummy that bulges and feels unstable. It is simply unthinkable to believe that such changes to our body would not have an impact on even the strongest of women mentally.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
These changes are not determined by age, nor fitness, size or diet. You could be a brand-new mother, a mother to teens, a grandmother \u2013 it simply doesn\u2019t matter. For a woman who develops postnatal incontinence in her 30s, this could mean 50 years of bladder weakness. Contrary to popular belief, this is not an \u2018old woman\u2019s problem\u2019. Almost 1 in 4 women between the ages of 18 and 44 experience incontinence. <\/p>\n\n\n\n