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Description

Catchy pregnancy fitness mantras can sound like wisdom, but they often collapse nuance into fear. I’m Christina Prevett, a pelvic floor physical therapist, researcher, and strength athlete, and I’m breaking down three phrases you’ve probably heard from coaches, social media, or even well-meaning medical providers. We look at what these lines are trying to protect you from, and where they quietly imply risk without solid evidence to back it up.

First, we unpack “just because you can doesn’t mean you should” and why it can steer pregnant athletes toward unnecessary scaling. We talk pelvic floor symptoms like leaking and heaviness, common worries like diastasis recti and prolapse, and the uncomfortable truth: many “pregnancy-safe” modifications are treated as fact even when the data isn’t there yet. Then we shift to a more useful framework: body readiness. Your training history, your adaptation, and your current capacity matter, and pregnancy changes those inputs gradually not overnight.

Next, we explore “if you were doing it before pregnancy, you can keep doing it now” and why that permission can be powerful, especially when access to pelvic floor PT and specialized coaching is limited. Finally, we tackle the postpartum classic “just listen to your body” and add the missing context: what signals are normal, what deserves a screening conversation, and how to think about progression when recovery timelines vary wildly after vaginal birth or C-section.

If you want more grounded guidance on pregnancy exercise, postpartum return to exercise, pelvic floor health, strength training, and core training, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a training partner, and leave a review so more moms can find it. Which of these mantras have you been told, and did it help or stress you out?

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