The Pattern Dr. Danaya Sees Over and Over
A woman comes in for her first pelvic floor PT appointment. She is nervous. She has been dealing with her symptoms for years — sometimes three years, sometimes ten, sometimes twenty-five.
Somewhere around the second or third session, when she is starting to feel better, she says the same thing almost every time:
“I’m so glad I found you. I wish I had known about this sooner.”
Dr. Danaya hears this so often that it has become one of the defining experiences of her career. And each time, she feels two things: genuine happiness that this woman is finally getting help, and genuine sadness that she suffered for so long when treatment was available.
So why do women wait? After treating over a thousand patients, Dr. Danaya has identified three reasons that come up again and again.
Reason #1: They Did Not Know Treatment Existed
This is the most common reason, and the most frustrating. Women are living with leaking, pelvic pain, painful sex, or prolapse symptoms and they genuinely do not know that pelvic floor physical therapy is a thing.
They were never told about it by their OB. Their primary care doctor never mentioned it. Their friends did not know about it either. And when they searched their symptoms online, they found forums full of women saying “that’s just what happens after kids” — which reinforced the belief that this was just their life now.
The reality is that most medical training includes very little education about pelvic floor physical therapy. DPT programs barely cover pelvic floor — which is why post-graduate specialization requires hundreds of additional hours. OB-GYNs and primary care doctors may genuinely not know the full scope of what pelvic floor PT can treat. They are not withholding information — they often just do not have it.
This is why awareness matters. This is why Dr. Danaya wants to offer workshops to both women and providers — to start changing this one conversation at a time. It is common, but that does not mean you have to live with it.
Reason #2: They Were Embarrassed or Nervous
Pelvic floor issues are deeply personal. Leaking urine. Pain during sex. A feeling of something “falling out.” These are not symptoms most women want to discuss with anyone, let alone a healthcare provider they have never met.
And then there is the internal exam. Women hear “pelvic floor PT” and immediately think about an internal assessment — and that thought alone keeps some women from ever making the call. Past bad experiences with gynecological exams, sexual trauma, or simply the vulnerability of the situation creates a barrier that feels insurmountable.
Here is what Dr. Danaya wants every woman to know about this:
- You are always in charge. You can stop any part of the exam at any time, for any reason.
- Internal assessment is optional. You do not have to do it at your first visit. You do not have to do it at all. Treatment can be adapted.
- Everything is explained. Dr. Danaya explains what she is going to do before she does it, and checks in with you throughout. There are no surprises.
- Most patients are surprised. The most common feedback is that the experience was far more comfortable — and far less scary — than they expected.
The unknown is the scary part. Once women know what to expect, the embarrassment fades quickly. And almost universally, they wish they had come in sooner.
Reason #3: They Could Not Find the Time
This one is practical. You have a baby — or two, or three, or four — and adding another appointment to the chaos of postpartum life feels impossible. Who is going to watch the kids? How do you fit it into nap schedules and feeding schedules? And if you are back at work, when exactly are you supposed to go?
Dr. Danaya knows this from personal experience. She has been postpartum four times. She knows how hard it is to leave the house some days. She knows the guilt of taking time for yourself when there are kids who need you.
This is one of the reasons Radiant Pelvic Health does in-home visits. No driving. No waiting room. No finding childcare. Dr. Danaya brings a full treatment setup — table, equipment, supplies — directly to your home. Your kids can be in the next room. You do not have to go anywhere.
It does not eliminate the time barrier entirely. But it removes the biggest logistical obstacles that keep women from starting.
The True Cost of Waiting
When women put off treatment for years, the cost is not just the symptoms themselves. It is everything the symptoms take away.
The financial cost. Incontinence pads and specialty underwear are not free — and they are a recurring expense that adds up over years. Women with prolapse may eventually need surgery that could have been avoided or delayed with earlier conservative treatment. The cost of managing symptoms is often far more than the cost of treating them.
The physical cost. Women who leak during exercise often stop exercising. They stop running, stop going to the gym, stop playing with their kids. Over years, this avoidance increases their risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, and weight gain. The pelvic floor issue does not stay in the pelvis — it affects whole-body health.
The emotional cost. This is the one that breaks Dr. Danaya’s heart the most. Women who cannot connect to their own body. Women who avoid intimacy with their partner because sex is painful. Women who skip social gatherings because they are afraid of leaking. Women who lose their athletic identity and the mental health benefits that come with it. The isolation, the frustration, the feeling of being trapped in a body that does not work the way it should.
As Dr. Danaya puts it: it impacts every aspect of your life by not getting these things treated.
The Women Who Wait the Longest
One of the most heartbreaking patterns in pelvic health is the woman in her 40s, 50s, or 60s who comes in after decades of symptoms. She had her kids twenty or thirty years ago. She was told by her doctor — or by her own mother — that leaking, pain, or pressure was just part of being a woman who had children.
She has structured her entire life around her symptoms. She knows where every public bathroom is. She wears dark pants. She does not jump on trampolines with her grandkids. She has not run in twenty years. She packs extra underwear when she travels.
And then she finds out — at 55 — that treatment existed all along. That her muscles still respond. That she can get better.
The relief is real. The improvement is real. But the grief for the decades she lost is also real. And it did not have to be this way.
It Is Never Too Late
If you have been living with pelvic floor symptoms for years — or decades — here is the most important thing to know: it is not too late.
Your pelvic floor muscles do not have an expiration date. They respond to treatment whether you are 6 months postpartum or 30 years postpartum. The patterns of tension, weakness, or dysfunction can be assessed and addressed at any age.
You may have adapted to your symptoms. You may have accepted them as normal. You may have forgotten what it feels like to not think about your pelvic floor every day. But adaptation is not the same as resolution — and your body is still capable of change.
What You Wish You Had Known
If Dr. Danaya could tell every woman one thing, it would be this: pelvic floor symptoms are common, but they are not inevitable, and they are almost always treatable.
You do not have to wait until it gets worse. You do not have to wait until you have time. You do not have to be embarrassed. You do not have to push through it. And you definitely do not have to accept it as your new normal.
The help exists. It works. And most women who finally take that step have the same reaction: “I wish I had done this years ago.”
If something here resonates, you don’t need to keep guessing.
We offer a free 15-minute consult to help you understand your symptoms and next steps. No pressure. Just clarity.
Book Your Free 15-Minute Consult“Danaya helped me heal after my fourth pregnancy and it was hands down the BEST thing I’ve done for my postpartum self. She doesn’t just slap a bandaid on the issue and call it a day. She asks questions and tries to discover what the root of the problem is to create lasting results.”
— Allison M.