Diaphragm to Pelvic Floor: The Forgotten Connection That Changes Everything with Jana Danielson
The Energy Blueprint Podcast
Ari Whitten
4.6 • 781 Ratings
🗓️ 24 January 2026
⏱️ 37 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Over 30 million women in the US deal with some form of pelvic floor dysfunction…nearly 1 in 4 women.Â
In this episode, I speak with Jana Danielson, founder of Lead Pilates and creator of the Cooch Ball (and no, that's not a typo!), who reveals shocking realities about the urinary incontinence product industry.Â
Even though they'll top $24 billion in profit this year, 9 out of 10 people could fix incontinence if they learned to breathe correctly and stopped being such literal "tight asses" (her words, not mine).
Listen to the podcast to hear all of Jana's insights.
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In this podcast, Jana and I discuss:
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Why over 30 million US women deal with pelvic floor dysfunction—nearly 1 in 4 women—and the urinary incontinence product industry will top $24 billion this year
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The pelvic floor can be too tight (hypertonic) or too loose (hypotonic)—too tight causes one set of symptoms, while too loose causes another
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About 90% of erectile dysfunction is actually a fitness/movement issue, not medical…when pelvic floor muscles get too tight, blood flow to the penis cannot happen
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There are four grades of prolapse; some grades can be completely reversed, while others require surgery. Jana explains the anatomical and energetic underpinnings of prolapse
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The diaphragm is the "roof" and the pelvic floor is the "floor" of your core—doing 10-12 diaphragmatic breaths daily will wake up the pelvic floor tissues, like giving it CPR
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The pudendal nerve's Latin root means "ashamed"—it's the main sensory and motor nerve from your brain to your genitals/pelvic floor in both men and women
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You can do all the fancy medical spa pelvic floor contractions, but without proper breathing, your results won't last—you have to create the environment for the solution to work
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When you inhale into your diaphragm, the pelvic floor is in its restful/descension phase—when you exhale, it's in its lift phase, a key distinction for pelvic floor health
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Posture plays a considerable role in pelvic floor health: mechanically holding weight in an optimal position takes unnecessary stress off your pelvic floor
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If you chug water rapidly, your body will excrete more of it. Sip tiny amounts throughout the day so cells absorb hydration properly and your bladder functions optimally
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I did some work with a urogynacologist from Nevada, and he helped me realize that the pelvic floor |
| 0:05.7 | as the floor of the core responds to the diaphragm. So if we're not breathing, guess what, everyone, |
| 0:11.5 | the pelvic floor is going to start to become dysfunctional because it relies on the diaphragm to give it cues. |
| 0:18.5 | Hey, this is Ari. Welcome back to the Energy Blueprint podcast. |
| 0:21.8 | With me today is Jana Danielson, who is an award-winning wellness entrepreneur, best-selling |
| 0:27.9 | author, founder of lead Pilates and lead integrated health therapies and a pelvic floor health |
| 0:35.1 | expert. She's also the creator of the Cooch Ball, which I have a funny story about. |
| 0:43.3 | And this is the world's first patented pelvic floor fitness tool for women. |
| 0:50.2 | She's coached and consulted with tens of thousands of women from all over the world to help improve their quality of life, their confidence, and their impact on the world. |
| 0:59.1 | And in this episode, we're talking all about pelvic floor health and how to improve yours, particularly with a focus on women. |
| 1:08.3 | So enjoy this episode. So first of all, I have to start off by giving you a little |
| 1:15.2 | confession. Or confession might not be, well, yeah, confession is a little bit of the right word. |
| 1:22.5 | So we met in person a few months ago at Mindshare and you were handing out a little package and a little device. |
| 1:34.3 | And I didn't know what it was and you just sort of walked by and you, as I was in conversation, you handed me this thing and you told me it was a cooch ball. |
| 1:46.1 | And I looked down at it and my brain took a few seconds to figure out what a cooch ball is. |
| 1:53.5 | And then I was like, oh, well, that's pretty cool. Okay. I like what this lady's up to. This is good stuff. And then I was walking |
| 2:03.5 | around for like two hours carrying a coach ball. And I didn't have a bag to put it in. And I was |
| 2:14.0 | staying at the hotel that was sort of a 15 minute walk away, so I didn't have my hotel room nearby. |
| 2:20.2 | I didn't have anywhere to put it. |
| 2:21.8 | So I'm just walking around for hours carrying a cooch ball, which is not the most appropriate thing for someone without a cooch, so to speak. |
| 2:33.8 | And so my confession is this. |
| 2:36.0 | My confession is I gave the cooch ball to someone else. |
... |
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