
I was asked to explain the pelvic floor disorders. What are those?
First, I have to explain what the pelvic floor is.
The body is composed of a mesh of interwoven collagen-made connective tissue. Within this tissue, our organs are created and suspended. When discussing the pelvic floor, we refer to a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissues that form a supportive structure at the base of the pelvis.
Pelvic floor disorders are a group of conditions that affect the pelvic floor, which includes the muscles, ligaments, and connective tissue that support the pelvic organs (bladder, uterus, vagina, and bowel). The pelvic floor prevents these organs from dropping down and helps them work correctly.
Since doctors are intentionally misled with false information, they do not understand correctly why health issues occur and misinterpret their findings using the indoctrinated false knowledge. This is very noticeable when we start examining the symptoms attributed to the problems of the pelvic floor.
My friend was told that the symptoms she is experiencing are due to pelvic floor disorder, and her symptoms are
Thin, narrow stools
A sensation of stool trying to pass past a blockage, even though nothing is physically there
Needing laxatives to pass stool
No stool or blockage visible on colonoscopy
Professional medical sites mention symptoms of pelvic disorder as organ prolapses, urinary and fecal incontinence, which is the opposite of what my friend is experiencing.
The pelvic floor contains two key openings: the urogenital hiatus, which allows passage for the urethra and vagina, and the rectal hiatus, which allows passage for the anal canal through the pelvic wall.
A healthy pelvic floor can contract, squeeze, lift, and relax. Pelvic floor muscles are controlled through the Vagus autonomic involuntary system, but they can also be voluntarily controlled. Men squeeze them to achieve an erection. Women can learn to contract them, giving more sexual pleasure voluntarily. By contracting them, the tendons of the tunica albuginea tighten, constricting some blood vessels and the vaginal sphincter. This will obstruct the passage of urine and excrement. The soyence teaches us that if the pelvic floor is relaxed, problems with incontinence will occur. This implies that every time the pelvic floor is relaxed, people experience incontinence, and this is not true. We do not urinate and defecate when we are relaxed during meditation or when we are swinging relaxed in the hammock.
So, when my friend was diagnosed as having pelvic floor dysfunction, the diagnosis was incorrect. This would have relaxed the pelvic floor and not constricted it, causing problems in bowel movement.
The pelvic floor dysfunction is a chronic health issue that slowly creeps in, and her symptoms came abruptly. Basically, her intestines stopped moving. We encounter this when certain drugs are being used, especially the fat-reducing drugs that are based on poisoning the nervous system of the stomach to stop digestion, and in this way cut the feeling of hunger.
To be able to pinpoint the exact cause, more information is needed than was provided, but although her pelvic wall may be affected, her symptoms are not caused by it.
The pelvic floor may be affected by medication (pharmaceutical and natural plant-based ones), but in most cases, we are talking about a cellular dehydration that makes cells acidic and brittle and affects the connective tissues as well as muscles and tendons. I wrote and made videos explaining the problems dehydrated cells cause in the body.
This article will shed some more light on the issue of dehydration
Dehydrated muscles do not contract well, and since our orifices are controlled through sphincter muscles, when dehydrated on the cellular level, leakage occurs. Urinary and fecal incontinence is a typical example of cellular dehydration of sphincter muscles, as is reflux. They have nothing to do with the pelvic floor disorder, but since those are organs in the vicinity of the pelvic floor, this allows doctors to blame the pelvic floor, making them look like they know what is going on, while in fact, they are clueless.
My brother was a urologist, and he was utilizing all kinds of compression systems when trying to control incontinence in his patients, only causing swelling, irritation, and more misery.
Unfortunately, I did not have this knowledge at that time, and when I started to understand certain things and tried to share them with my brother, he looked at me like I was from another planet, unwilling to try or implement any of this knowledge.
Everything that soyence calls the symptoms of a pelvic floor dysfunction, including the pelvic floor problems, are related to cellular dehydration or poisoning, and no exercises will help to correct this. Not understanding the problem, exercising becomes the only option.
Exercising the pelvic floor muscles will increase the blood and lymphatic flow of the pelvic floor, which may ease some of the symptoms, but real healing will not be achieved until cellular hydration is implemented or the poisoning is stopped.
To learn about cellular hydration, please read this article
Love and light to us all
