Pelvic Floor

About Pelvic Floor

Pelvic Floor organizes this anatomical region into intuitive sub-groups for clearer strength tracking.

Pelvic Floor sits inside Core > Core Pelvis on Skill Life, so a strong entry page should clarify scope quickly, keep nearby branches distinct, and make the next action obvious.

Where it sits in the tree

The canonical path for Pelvic Floor runs through Strength > Core > Core Pelvis > Pelvic Floor, so the route should expose enough hierarchy to keep the page understandable before hydration finishes.

From this route, someone should be able to move back into Core > Core Pelvis and out into neighboring leaves without losing track of how the current skill fits into the larger branch.

  • Review Strength

    Move up to Strength to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

  • Review Core

    Move up to Core to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

  • Review Core Pelvis

    Move up to Core Pelvis to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

Useful next routes

After reviewing Pelvic Floor, the next useful moves are to compare adjacent skills, open related groups, connect books or challenges that support improvement, and decide where this skill belongs in a broader practice system.

Skill routes work better when they lead directly into those adjacent public surfaces instead of acting like isolated leaves.

  • Review Strength

    Move up to Strength to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

  • Review Core

    Move up to Core to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

  • Review Core Pelvis

    Move up to Core Pelvis to compare neighboring skills and keep the current path in context.

  • Back to skills

    Browse neighboring skills, categories, and assessments from the main directory.

  • Compare progress

    See rankings and category movement tied to visible improvement.

  • Find skill groups

    Join public communities that can support practice, accountability, and discussion.

  • Start a challenge

    Use challenge pressure to keep the skill moving after initial motivation fades.

  • Find related books

    Connect books and reading goals to the skill you are trying to improve.