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Dr. Sandy

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Common Causes of Pelvic Pain in Men

May 26, 20265 min read

“Pelvic pain is usually not one single problem, it’s a stacking effect.” — Dr. Sandy Shulca, DPT

Pelvic pain in men can feel incredibly confusing.

Many men spend months — sometimes years — trying to figure out what is causing their symptoms. They may experience pelvic pressure, groin pain, testicular discomfort, bladder symptoms, tightness, or pain during sitting and still feel like nothing fully explains what is happening.

And one of the biggest reasons pelvic pain feels so frustrating is because it usually does not come from just one thing.

Most of the time, pelvic pain is not caused by one bad movement, one weak muscle, or one single injury.

It is usually a combination of factors building on top of each other over time.


The “Overflowing Cup” Effect

A simple way to understand pelvic pain is thinking about it like filling a cup with water.

Stress adds a little.
Sitting adds a little.
Poor sleep adds a little.
Heavy workouts add a little.
Poor breathing adds a little.
Chronic tension adds a little.

At first, the body can handle it.

But eventually the cup overflows and symptoms start showing up.

This is why many men suddenly develop pelvic pain even though they cannot identify one specific injury or moment where something “went wrong.”

The body was often building tension and overload long before the pain appeared.


Chronic Muscle Tension

One of the biggest contributors to pelvic pain in men is chronic muscle tension.

Many men are unconsciously clenching their pelvic floor throughout the day without even realizing it.

This can happen:

  • during stress

  • during workouts

  • while sitting

  • while driving

  • while concentrating

  • even during sleep

The pelvic floor is designed to move, contract, relax, and coordinate with breathing and movement. It is not designed to stay tight all day long.

Over time, muscles that never fully relax often become painful, fatigued, irritated, and poorly coordinated.

This is one reason many men with pelvic pain also describe feeling: tight, guarded, unable to fully relax, constantly tense through the hips, abdomen, or pelvis


Poor Coordination Between the Core, Hips, and Pelvic Floor

Sometimes the issue is not weakness.

Sometimes the muscles are simply working at the wrong time.

The pelvic floor constantly works together with the:

  • breathing muscles

  • abdominal muscles

  • hips

  • low back

  • nervous system

When these systems stop coordinating properly, the body begins creating inefficient pressure and tension patterns.

A good way to think about it is like slamming the gas pedal and brakes at the same time.

The car does not move smoothly, and the system wears down faster.

That is often what happens when the pelvic floor is not coordinating properly with breathing, movement, posture, and pressure management.


Nervous System Overload

Another major contributor to pelvic pain is nervous system sensitivity.

When stress stays elevated for long periods of time or when pain has been around for a while, the nervous system can become overprotective.

This can cause:

  • muscles to tighten reflexively

  • symptoms to move around

  • normal sensations to feel painful

  • pain to persist longer than expected

This is one reason pelvic pain can feel unpredictable.

Some days symptoms feel manageable.
Other days the body suddenly feels irritated, tense, or hypersensitive again.

Pain does not always mean damage.

Very often, it means the system is stuck in protection mode.


Sitting, Heavy Lifting, and Exercise Load

Sitting for long periods increases pressure through the pelvis.

Heavy lifting increases pressure demands on the core and pelvic floor.

Endurance sports require constant muscle control and stability.

None of these things are bad.

But without proper recovery, breathing mechanics, movement variability, and relaxation, they can add more load to an already overloaded system.

This is why pelvic pain often worsens during:

  • stressful work weeks

  • long drives

  • prolonged sitting

  • intense training phases

  • periods of poor recovery

The body can usually tolerate stress well until too many stressors begin stacking together at once.


What Can Help Reduce Pelvic Pain?

One of the biggest mistakes men make is immediately trying to “push through” pelvic pain with more stretching, more exercises, or more force.

But often the first goal is not increasing intensity.

The first goal is reducing tension and pressure around the pelvis.

One thing that helps many men is gentle massage gun work around surrounding muscles like the: glutes, hamstrings, and inner thighs.

Not directly on the pelvic floor itself.

The goal is light relaxation, not aggressive deep pressure.These muscles connect directly into the pelvis, and when they stay tight, they can increase pulling, compression, and pressure throughout the system.

Heat can also help.

Warm showers or baths with Epsom salt often help relax muscles, improve blood flow, and calm nervous system tension, especially after long periods of stress or sitting.

And one of the simplest but most effective strategies is simply moving more often.

The human body was not designed to sit for hours at a time.

Standing up every 30 to 45 minutes, walking briefly, changing positions, or lightly stretching can help reduce constant pressure on the pelvic floor and improve circulation and muscle tone.

You do not always need an intense workout.

Sometimes you simply need interruptions to the tension cycle.


Pelvic Pain Is Not Random

Pelvic pain follows patterns. And patterns can change.

The body adapts to stress, tension, posture, pressure, movement habits, breathing patterns, and nervous system overload over time. That means many pelvic pain symptoms are not random failures of the body, they are often the result of an overloaded system asking for better balance and recovery.

Understanding the “why” behind symptoms is often the first step toward finally making progress.

I’m Dr. Sandy, your pelvic health and jaw physical therapy specialist. If this helped you better understand your body, keep learning, keep asking questions, and remember, your body is not working against you. It is responding to the load being placed on it.

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Dr. Sandy Shulca, DPT

On a mission to help reduce pain, improve mobility and restore function without imaging or surgery. I strive to provide personalized, comprehensive, and evidence-based physical therapy to my clients and help them feel better and move better. I believe that every patient is unique and deserves individualized treatment plans tailored to their specific needs. Imagine how much more successful you would be if you were pain free

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