Offer
Provide additional details about the offer you're running.
Discover expertly designed products and trusted guidance to support your pelvic wellness for every stage of life.
Our products are thoughtfully designed to support your body’s natural strength and comfort.
Build lasting strength and support your core health.
Regain muscle tone and comfort after childbirth.
Reduce leaks and improve everyday confidence.
Increase comfort and pleasure in your relationships.
Getting started is simple. Follow these easy steps and tips to choose the right product, begin your routine safely

Getting started is simple. Follow these easy steps and tips to choose the right product, begin your routine safely
Consider your comfort level, medical history, and wellness goals. Our size and weight guides can help you decide.
Consider your comfort level, medical history, and wellness goals. Our size and weight guides can help you decide.
Consider your comfort level, medical history, and wellness goals. Our size and weight guides can help you decide.
Meet the specialists behind our pelvic wellness collection experienced professionals dedicated to guiding you with trusted advice.












Understanding your foundation for better wellness and pleasure
A group of muscles that form a supportive hammock from your pubic bone to tailbone. They control continence, support organs, and play a starring role in sexual function and orgasm. Like any muscle group, they can be too tight, too weak, or imbalanced. They work best when they can both contract AND relax fully.
The deepest layer of pelvic floor muscles, including the pubococcygeus, puborectalis, and iliococcygeus. These are the heavy lifters that support your organs and wrap around your openings. They're involuntary during orgasm but can be consciously controlled with practice.
Your deepest core muscle that works with the pelvic floor like a natural corset. When functioning properly, it automatically engages before movement to stabilize your spine and pelvis. Dysfunction here often accompanies pelvic floor issues.
The small triangular bone at the base of your spine where pelvic floor muscles attach. Tailbone pain often indicates pelvic floor tension or trauma. Its position affects the entire pelvic bowl's function.
Muscles that are chronically tight and can't fully relax, often causing pain with penetration, difficulty with bowel movements, and chronic pelvic pain. It's like having a perpetual charlie horse in your pelvis. Treatment focuses on relaxation, not strengthening.
Weak or poorly coordinated muscles leading to incontinence, reduced sensation, or organ prolapse. This is where targeted strengthening helps, but generic Kegels aren't always the answer.
Involuntary tightening of vaginal muscles making penetration painful or impossible. It's often both physical and psychological, treatable with dilators, therapy, and patience. Your body is protecting you from perceived threat — healing means teaching it safety.
Chronic vulvar pain without clear cause, ranging from burning to stabbing sensations. It's real, it's treatable, and you're not imagining it. Treatment might include physical therapy or topical medications.
When organs (bladder, uterus, rectum) descend into the vaginal canal due to weakened support structures. Severity ranges from barely noticeable to requiring surgery. It's common after childbirth but not inevitable or untreatable.
Medical term for painful sex, with causes ranging from infections to muscle dysfunction to psychological factors. It's never something to "push through." Pain is information — listen to it.
Leaking urine with coughing, sneezing, jumping, or laughing due to weakened pelvic floor support. Common but not normal. Very treatable with targeted exercises and proper mechanics.
Sudden, intense need to urinate with involuntary loss of urine. Often related to pelvic floor tension or bladder irritation. Behavioral strategies often help as much as exercises.
Specialized therapy addressing muscle dysfunction through internal and external techniques. It's not just Kegels — it includes manual therapy, biofeedback, and whole-body assessment. Finding a qualified practitioner changes everything.
Using sensors to show real-time pelvic muscle activity, teaching awareness and control. It's like a mirror for muscles you can't see. Particularly helpful for those who can't tell if they're contracting or relaxing correctly.
Graduated vaginal inserts used to gently stretch tissues and desensitize painful areas. It's exposure therapy for your vagina. Progress is personal — some advance weekly, others need months. Combine with breathing and relaxation for best results.
Manual therapy targeting specific knots in pelvic muscles that refer pain elsewhere. That hip pain might be a pelvic floor trigger point. Internal and external work combined yields best results.
Manual stretching of the tissue between vagina and anus, especially helpful in pregnancy or for scar tissue. Regular practice increases elasticity and awareness. Your partner can learn this too — it's intimate healthcare.
Consciously contracting and relaxing pelvic floor muscles. Quality beats quantity — ten perfect ones trump hundred sloppy ones. Must include the relaxation phase. If you're clenching your butt or holding your breath, you're doing them wrong.
Actively relaxing and lengthening the pelvic floor, like the feeling of starting to pee. Essential for hypertonic floors and often skipped in standard advice. The release is as important as the squeeze.
Deep belly breathing that coordinates with pelvic floor movement. Inhale = pelvic floor relaxes down. Exhale = gentle lift up. This natural rhythm gets disrupted by stress and poor posture.
Coordinating breath with both diaphragm and pelvic floor movement. Creates optimal intra-abdominal pressure. The foundation of functional core strength that protects rather than harms.
Lying on your back, lifting hips while engaging pelvic floor and glutes. Builds functional strength when done correctly. Focus on lifting from the pelvic floor, not just squeezing glutes.
Growing baby and hormones affect pelvic floor elasticity and strength. Preparation during pregnancy improves birth and recovery outcomes. Pelvic PT during pregnancy is preventive care, not just problem-solving.
The fourth trimester's focus on healing birth-related changes. Six weeks isn't magical — real recovery takes months. Every birth is different; comparing recoveries helps no one. See a pelvic PT even without symptoms.
Abdominal separation common during pregnancy where rectus muscles drift apart. Affects core stability and pelvic floor function. Specific exercises can help; general ab work might worsen it.
The transition before menopause when hormones fluctuate wildly. Affects tissue elasticity, muscle tone, and lubrication. Pelvic symptoms often appear or worsen. Not a disease — a transition requiring adaptation.
Decreased estrogen affects vaginal tissue, pelvic floor tone, and bladder function. Symptoms are manageable with proper care. Many women find this phase liberating once they address the physical changes.
Feet flat on floor or stool, leaning slightly forward for bowel movements. The 35-degree angle reduces straining on pelvic floor. Never hover over toilets — you're training dysfunction.
How you stand, sit, and move affects pelvic floor function. Locked knees, tucked pelvis, and shallow breathing all stress the system. Small adjustments yield big improvements.
Proper water intake maintains tissue health and prevents bladder irritation. Concentrated urine irritates the bladder, potentially causing urgency. Don't restrict fluids to avoid leaks — that makes things worse.
A removable device inserted vaginally to support prolapsed organs. Like a sports bra for your vagina. Not just for grandmas — young mothers and athletes use them too.
External compression shorts or belts that provide support during pregnancy or recovery. Can reduce pain and improve function. Temporary support while building internal strength.
Remember: Pelvic health is whole-body health. These muscles affect continence, sexual function, core stability, and quality of life. Seeking help isn't weakness — it's wisdom.
Sign up to receive sustainability updates, promotions and sneak peeks of upcoming products.