Close Menu
Fit and Healthy Weight

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man Transformation Revealed: ‘Masters of the Universe’ Trailer Shows Insane Muscle Gains

    April 2, 2026

    Chair Exercises to Reduce Belly Overhang After 60, Trainer

    April 2, 2026

    Foundayo vs. Wegovy: How Do the New Weight Loss Pills Compare?

    April 2, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fit and Healthy Weight
    Thursday, April 2
    • Home
    • Diet
    • Mindset
    • Recipes
    • Reviews
    • Stories
    • Supplements
    • Tips
    • Workouts
    Fit and Healthy Weight
    Home»Workouts»Jen Affleck Is on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Just 2 Months Postpartum—and Pelvic Floor PTs Have Thoughts
    Workouts

    Jen Affleck Is on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Just 2 Months Postpartum—and Pelvic Floor PTs Have Thoughts

    By September 18, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Jen Affleck Is on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Just 2 Months Postpartum—and Pelvic Floor PTs Have Thoughts
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Jen Affleck salsa’d her way through the season 34 premiere of Dancing With the Stars on September 16—just a cool 11ish weeks after having her third child, Penelope, in early July. If you’re doing the math, that means she hit the studio for training with her partner, new DWTS pro Jan Ravnik, within two months of giving birth. And given the MomTok influencer has had no formal dance training—except “being Latina,” as she said jokingly in her first behind-the-scenes clip—we have to imagine those sessions are intense. As she admitted in the clip: “My pelvic floor might not be ready.”

    No doubt, it’s intrepid to tackle such a physical task in front of millions of viewers so soon after childbirth. While Affleck’s first dance to Bad Bunny’s NUEVAYoL didn’t blow judges out of the water (her scores put her in the middle of the pack), viewers at SELF watched and wondered: Is she risking her health by competing mere weeks postpartum?

    Without knowing the specifics of her recovery, it’s tough to say whether she’s endangering her body—but in any case, pregnancy and childbirth do a number on your pelvic floor. “The muscles become overstretched, lengthened, and weakened during the 40 weeks [of pregnancy] because of all the hormone changes, and adding a vaginal delivery on top of that piles on even more strain,” Riva Preil, PT, DPT, a board-certified pelvic floor physical therapist, author of The Inside Story: The Woman’s Guide to Lifelong Pelvic Health and founder of Revitalize Physical Therapy in New York, tells SELF. (With a C-section, you might evade the impact of laboring and pushing a baby through your pelvis, but these births require a whole different kind of recovery for your ab muscles.)

    While doctors often clear postpartum folks for any activity at the six-week mark, that’s really just the point at which your uterus will have healed; pelvic floor weakness, by contrast, can linger for 12 weeks, or longer, as SELF has previously reported. (Cue the painful sex and peeing-while-you-laugh that tends to mark this period.) That’s not to say you should hold off on moving your body for that amount of time; in fact, you may be able to exercise within a few days postpartum, provided you had an uncomplicated vaginal delivery with no perineal tearing and feel up for it. But the type of exercise matters in the postpartum phase, and that’s where Dr. Preil expresses concern about Affleck’s daily multihour dance rehearsals.

    The soonest expert guidelines suggest diving into such high-impact exercise is at the 12-week postpartum point—which Affleck is still just shy of, Sara Reardon, PT, DPT, WCS, New Orleans–based board-certified pelvic floor physical therapist and founder of online pelvic floor workout platform The Vagina Whisperer, tells SELF. And even being able to do that is dependent on your individual recovery and whether you’ve rebuilt your pelvic floor and core strength in the prior postpartum weeks, she says. Otherwise, you put yourself at greater risk of developing pelvic organ prolapse, which happens when the pelvic floor fails to support the pelvic organs and they drop out of place. That can cause a painful bulge in your vaginal area, as well as urinary leakage, constipation, pain during sex, and other uncomfortable symptoms.

    Affleck Dancing floor Jen Months pelvic Postpartumand PTs Stars Thoughts
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous Article6 Simple Chemistry-Based Cooking Tricks That Actually Make Food Better
    Next Article 7 Best Cracker Barrel Breakfasts That Aren’t Full of Junk

      Related Posts

      Workouts

      Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man Transformation Revealed: ‘Masters of the Universe’ Trailer Shows Insane Muscle Gains

      April 2, 2026
      Workouts

      Foundayo vs. Wegovy: How Do the New Weight Loss Pills Compare?

      April 2, 2026
      Workouts

      Hiking Fitness Guide: The Best Training Plan, Strength Workouts & Gear to Dominate Any Trail

      April 2, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Top Posts

      New Research Shows Eggs Don’t Raise Your Cholesterol—But Here’s What Does

      August 1, 20256 Views

      6 Best Weightlifting Belts of 2025, According to Trainers

      July 3, 20255 Views

      Betty White’s 5-Ingredient Chicken Dinner Is Golden

      July 28, 20253 Views
      Stay In Touch
      • Facebook
      • YouTube
      • TikTok
      • WhatsApp
      • Twitter
      • Instagram
      Latest Reviews
      Tips

      When Is the Best Time to Eat Dinner for Your Health?

      adminJuly 1, 2025
      Diet

      This Intermittent Fasting Method Outperformed the Rest—But There’s a Catch

      adminJuly 1, 2025
      Workouts

      ‘Neckzilla’ Rubel Mosquera Qualifies for 2025 Mr. Olympia After Flex Weekend Italy Pro Win

      adminJuly 1, 2025

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

      Most Popular

      When Is the Best Time to Eat Dinner for Your Health?

      July 1, 20250 Views

      This Intermittent Fasting Method Outperformed the Rest—But There’s a Catch

      July 1, 20250 Views

      Signs, Identification, Impact, and More

      July 1, 20250 Views
      Our Picks

      Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man Transformation Revealed: ‘Masters of the Universe’ Trailer Shows Insane Muscle Gains

      April 2, 2026

      Chair Exercises to Reduce Belly Overhang After 60, Trainer

      April 2, 2026

      Foundayo vs. Wegovy: How Do the New Weight Loss Pills Compare?

      April 2, 2026
      Recent Posts
      • Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man Transformation Revealed: ‘Masters of the Universe’ Trailer Shows Insane Muscle Gains
      • Chair Exercises to Reduce Belly Overhang After 60, Trainer
      • Foundayo vs. Wegovy: How Do the New Weight Loss Pills Compare?
      • My husband doesn’t want to give up his mistress. Should I settle for half his heart? | Relationships
      • Hiking Fitness Guide: The Best Training Plan, Strength Workouts & Gear to Dominate Any Trail
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      © 2025 Fit and Healthy Weight. Designed by Pro.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.