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Showing posts from October, 2025

2nd Appointment

I did my previously assigned exercises 5 out of the 7 days over the past week. The glute one is pretty easy, but I wasn't sure about the ab one. I asked my PT today whether I was doing the ab one correctly, and she said to focus on the lower quadrants. She adjusted the exercise so that I'm not so much pulling back from my hand but using the inner, lower ab muscle (the transverse abdominus  or TA) to tilt my pelvis forward. To do the movement, I lie on my back with knees bent. Then I gently and slowly "tilt" my pelvis forward. The small of my back gets closer to the ground. I put "tilt" in quotation marks because a full-on pelvic tilt uses other muscles, too. The idea here is to activate the lower, inner muscle (the TA).  If you've ever done Pilates, you know how difficult it can be to activate the transverse abdominus! Why is such an important muscle hard to use? I suppose it's due to our modern-day lifestyles with too much sitting. I was having a to...

Glute Exercise

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My second assigned exercise is for the glutes --specifically, the gluteus minimus.  The gluteal muscles are important for core stability. This is also something I just learned!  The movements I'm to do are side leg lifts but with my legs bent. I lay on one side, bend my legs, and lift the top knee slowly up and down. I keep my ankle down but don't completely rest it on my other foot. Repeat a few times, then do the other side. Sometimes, I do another set. But this is key to the exercise: first, I need to roll forward almost as far as I can. It's almost like I'm laying half on my side and half on my belly. By rolling forward, the leg lifts target the glutes. If I don't roll forward and stay on my side, then the leg lift targets the hip flexors (many of the muscles in the front view).  (Same link as within the text above.) https://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/physical-medicine-rehabilitation/news/got-glutes-part-1-the-role-of-the-gluteus-maximus-and-health...

Abdominal Exercise

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My first exercise assignment to strengthen my core involves focusing on four abdominal quadrants. Two sections are above the belly button, two below.  Abdominal quadrants   I hold my hand on a quadrant and then attempt to pull that part of my body down and away from my hand into the floor. I move my hand from quadrant to quadrant and take a few seconds for each pull--slowly down, slowly up. My torso sometimes ends up twisting ever so slightly to push down each part of my belly. I am to do a few rounds of these every day. Remember to keep breathing throughout these sorts of exercises! Many of us have a tendency to hold our breath when activating muscles. 

First Day

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Sore and shocked . That’s how my first physical therapy appointment left me. I went today for pelvic floor trouble. Since I had my babies, over a dozen years ago now, my cervix has prolapsed. I’m prone to sudden pain if I sit down wrong. Tampons don’t go in the same as pre-pregnancy. Intercourse needs adjusting at times. Fortunately, since the cervix moves up and down during the menstrual cycle, I don’t have to deal with it showing itself down there 100% of the time. Also fortunately, I don’t have to deal with incontinence. But with the increasing discomfort and worry about how much worse things would get, I finally took up my primary care provider’s offer to refer me for pelvic floor therapy. Leading up to the appointment, I had my doubts that anything  could be done. More kegels? More squats? Nothing? So I was shocked when the therapist told me that not only could plenty be done, but that we were starting with my core and glutes. What?! I know I need to mind my posture, but I ge...