Stop sucking it in! Learn how Anterior Pelvic Tilt causes the "mom pooch" and how functional movement can help you heal your core and pelvic floor.
Let’s have a little "real talk" for a second. If you are scrolling through Instagram seeing influencers promising a "flat tummy in 5 minutes" while you’re sitting there wondering why your belly still sticks out—despite your best efforts at the gym or "eating clean"—I want you to take a deep breath. (A 360 breath, specifically, but we’ll get to that ).
The truth is, that "mom pooch" you’re frustrated with? It often isn't about body fat or a lack of crunches. As a PCES, I see this every day: it’s usually an alignment issue.

Imagine your pelvis is a bowl filled with water. In a neutral position, that water stays level. But for many of us—thanks to the way our bodies shift during pregnancy—that bowl starts to tip forward. This is called Anterior Pelvic Tilt (APT).
When your pelvis "spills water" out the front:
The result? Your internal organs have nowhere to go but out, creating that visible pooch or even worsening Diastasis Recti (DR). It’s not that you’re "broken"; it’s just that your "bowl" is tipped.
I know the temptation. We’re at Publix or heading into a Starbucks, and we reflexively "suck it in" to look flatter. But here is a bit of "no-nonsense" expert advice: Stop sucking it in. 🛑
When you constantly grip your upper abs, you create a pressure cooker in your midsection. That pressure has to go somewhere. Usually, it goes down (hello, leaking ) or it pushes out against your abdominal wall. To heal, your core needs to be able to contract AND relax. If you’re always "on," you’re never actually functional.
We aren't looking for a "fitness aesthetic" here—we’re looking for a body that functions so you can play tag and swim with your kids without fear. Here’s how we start:

I’m an athlete and a mom of two, so I know the "in the trenches" reality of a tired body. But I also know that you don't need a "bounce back" plan; you need a functional recovery plan. You don't need to do a thousand Kegels (please, don't—they aren't the magic fix we were told they were).
You just need to learn how to move safely in real life. Because the goal isn't just to "look" fit—it’s to be the grandma who can still lift things and move with ease.
Ready to stop guessing and start healing? If you’re feeling overwhelmed by conflicting info, let's get back to the basics of how your body actually works. Download my Pelvic Floor Essentials Guide to start retraining your core and pelvic floor for real life.
Categories: : Pelvic Floor & Core Health, Postpartum
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