Somewhere around the time you first sneeze and leak a little, or catch sight of the soft gap running down your belly, the worry creeps in: is my body just... different now? Permanently? Take a breath. Both of those things are among the most common experiences after giving birth — and, importantly, they're two separate stories that often get tangled into one scary one. Let's untangle them.
Diastasis recti: extremely common, often misunderstood
Diastasis recti is a separation of the abdominal muscles — a gap down the midline of your belly where the connective tissue stretched to make room for your baby. If you have it, you are overwhelmingly in the majority. In one cohort study following women through the first postpartum year, about 82.6% had diastasis recti. The same study found that cesarean birth and multiple pregnancies raise the odds.
Sit with that number for a second: more than four in five. This is not a defect or a sign you did something wrong during pregnancy. It's what bodies do to grow a person.
The myth worth deleting: the gap is not the leak
Here's the most useful finding in that research, and the one almost no one hears. The study looked at whether the abdominal gap actually predicted other pelvic floor problems — and found no significant difference in urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse between women who had diastasis recti and those who didn't.
In plain terms: diastasis recti does not reliably "cause" leaking. They're both common after birth, and they sometimes show up together, but they're partly independent problems. This matters because the internet is full of messaging that treats closing the gap as the master fix for everything — and it isn't. Don't catastrophize the gap, and don't assume healing it will automatically stop a leak. Treat each issue on its own terms.
Leaking when you cough, laugh, or sneeze
Postpartum urine leakage with coughing, laughing, sneezing, or jumping is common, and the NHS describes it as a normal part of the early postpartum picture that often improves with time and the right exercises. The first-line approach is pelvic floor (Kegel) exercises — and this isn't folk wisdom. ACOG endorses pelvic floor muscle exercises for stress incontinence.
A few practical notes on doing them well:
- Find the right muscles. They're the ones you'd use to stop the flow of urine or hold back gas — a lift-and-squeeze, not a clench of your buttocks or thighs.
- Mix quick and slow. Do some fast squeeze-and-releases and some longer holds.
- Make it a habit. Tie it to something you already do many times a day — every feed, every red light — so it actually happens.
- Don't hold your breath. Breathe normally through each rep.
Be patient with your core
Recovery here is measured in months, not days. Your connective tissue and pelvic floor spent the better part of a year stretching and bearing load; they don't snap back overnight, and trying to force the timeline (with aggressive crunches, for instance) can backfire. Gentle, consistent pelvic floor work and a slow return to core engagement do more than any quick fix. Give yourself the grace of a real timeline.
When to see a pelvic floor physical therapist
Self-care handles a lot, but some signs deserve a professional eye. See a pelvic floor physical therapist if you have:
- Leakage that doesn't improve despite consistent pelvic floor exercises
- A feeling of heaviness, dragging, or bulging in the vagina (which can signal prolapse)
- Pelvic pain
- A gap that isn't closing over time
Pelvic floor physical therapy is a specialized, evidence-based field, and a good therapist can assess exactly what's happening and build a program around your body — something a generic online routine can't do. Ask your provider for a referral; you don't have to wait until things feel dire. For the broader set of symptoms that warrant a call after birth, see our guide to postpartum recovery warning signs.
If your middle feels soft and your bladder feels unreliable, your body isn't broken — it's healing from one of the most demanding things it will ever do. The gap is common, the leak is common, and most of both improves with patience and the right, unglamorous exercises. You're not failing your recovery. You're in the middle of it, exactly where you're supposed to be.