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If you're a parent, the term "clenched butt" might bring to mind a toddler gunning for the potty. For sex educators and havers, meanwhile, it's an anal-play nonstarter. But to pelvic-floor therapists, butt clenching is the name for a particular pelvic-floor position that can lead to a slew of issues — and this is the type of butt clenching we're exploring today.

Ahead, we break down exactly what butt clenching is, why it happens, and how to stop doing it. , DPT, a physical therapist and expert with pelvic health education platform . , DPT, a Los Angeles-based pelvic-floor therapist who specializes in incontinence and dyspareunia.



There are two different booty positions that pelvic-floor therapists may refer to as butt clenching, says physical therapist , an expert with , a pelvic health education platform created by wearable-intimates brand . One type of butt clenching is "the true clench," she says. According to , DPT, a Los Angeles-based pelvic-floor therapist who specializes in incontinence and dyspareunia, with the true clench, people's butt cheeks are pinched together because their glute (aka butt) muscles are in an overly contracted state.

Some people clench their bums involuntarily as part of a stress or trauma response, much like how other people or draw up their shoulders, she explains. (This particular type of butt clenching is also known as butt gripping.) Sometimes pelvic-floor therapists also refer to butt as butt clenching, says Dr.

Hazama. "During the tuck-un.

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