If you have finally decided to do something about leaking, pelvic pain, or that postpartum heaviness nobody warned you about, the next hurdle is usually the unknown. What actually happens at a pelvic floor physical therapy appointment? Most of my clients in Stillwater tell me they put off booking for months because they did not know what to expect. This post walks you through the entire first visit at Enhance PT, minute by minute, so there are no surprises.
Where the visit happens
Enhance PT is a private, one-room practice inside River Valley Athletic Club at 1826 Northwestern Ave in Stillwater, just off Highway 95. Park in the main lot, come through the RVAC entrance, and head toward the Salon and Spa area where the treatment room is located. There is no busy waiting room and no gym full of strangers watching your session. It is you, me, and a closed door for the entire hour.
The first 20 minutes: your story
Every evaluation starts with a conversation. Before your visit, you complete intake forms online so we do not burn your appointment time on paperwork. Then we sit down and I ask about your symptoms, your history, your birth stories if relevant, your bathroom habits, your activity goals, and what you have already tried.
This part matters more than most people expect. Pelvic floor symptoms almost never exist in isolation. Leaking with running can trace back to a breathing pattern. Pelvic pain can be tied to an old tailbone fall or a C-section scar. The questions I ask are how I find the actual driver instead of chasing the symptom.
The movement assessment: whole body first
Before anything pelvic-specific, I watch how you move. Depending on your goals that might mean squatting, bending, single-leg balance, breathing mechanics, and how your ribs, hips, and spine coordinate under load. The pelvic floor is one part of a pressure system that includes your diaphragm, abdominal wall, and hips, and treating it without looking at the rest of that system is how people end up doing kegels for a year with no change.
The pelvic floor assessment, and the consent conversation
If an internal assessment makes sense for your situation, I will explain exactly what it involves, why it would give us useful information, and what the alternatives are. Then you decide.
Here is what an internal pelvic floor assessment is not: stirrups, a speculum, or anything rushed. It is a single gloved finger, in a private room, with you draped and in control the entire time. I assess muscle tone, strength, coordination, and tenderness, which tells me whether your pelvic floor is weak, overactive, uncoordinated, or some combination. Those are very different problems with very different treatment plans.
And if you are not comfortable with internal work, ever or just not yet, we work externally. I have effective external and movement-based options, and consent is never a one-time checkbox. You can change your mind in either direction at any visit.
You get treatment on day one
A first visit at Enhance PT is not assessment-only. Once I understand what is driving your symptoms, treatment starts the same day. Depending on what we find, that might include manual therapy, breathing retraining, targeted exercise, or education about bladder and bowel habits that are quietly working against you.
You also leave with a home program. Not a printout of twenty generic exercises, but the two or three things that matter most for your specific situation, taught until you can do them confidently.
What the plan looks like after visit one
At the end of the hour you will know three things: what I think is going on, what the plan is, and roughly how long it should take. Most of my clients see meaningful change within 4 to 8 visits. Because every session is a full hour one-on-one, we get more done per visit than a typical insurance-based clinic can, which usually means fewer total visits.
Here is how the first visit at Enhance PT compares with what many people experience at a larger insurance-based clinic:
| Enhance PT (Stillwater) | Typical insurance-based clinic | |
|---|---|---|
| Evaluation length | 60 minutes | 30 to 45 minutes |
| Who you see | Dr. Bethany Reuter, DPT, every visit | Whichever therapist is scheduled |
| Treatment on day one | Yes, hands-on | Often evaluation only |
| Time one-on-one | The full hour | Often split with aides or other patients |
| Cost clarity | $200 flat, known upfront | Depends on deductible, often a surprise |
What it costs and how to pay
A new client evaluation is $200 for 60 minutes. Follow-up visits are $175. There is no membership, no package requirement, and no referral needed in Minnesota thanks to direct access laws that let you start PT without seeing a physician first. HSA and FSA cards are accepted, and I provide superbills on request so you can pursue out-of-network reimbursement from your insurance.
The bottom line
A first pelvic floor PT visit at Enhance PT is a full hour, one-on-one with the same Doctor of Physical Therapy you will see at every future visit. You talk, you move, you get assessed only in ways you consent to, and you leave with treatment already started and a clear plan. If you have been putting this off because you did not know what to expect, now you do. The American Physical Therapy Association’s consumer resource ChoosePT is a good place to read more about pelvic floor physical therapy in general, and when you are ready, you can schedule online or call (651) 369-1196.