
Delaney PearceMSOT, OTR/L
Pelvic Floor Therapist
I became a pelvic floor therapist because nobody else wanted to talk about it. In school, the anatomy classes covered the bladder, bowel, and reproductive system quickly and clinically without any acknowledgement of the stigma and complexity that surround them in real life. Everything was black and white. Nothing was human. The pelvic floor became my passion because its dysfunction leads to some of the most common, most impactful, and most quietly suffered experiences people carry. We deserve more than a diagram and a clinical definition.
I have never been embarrassed by pee, poop, or sex. I think that's a prerequisite for this work, and I think it matters that patients know it walking in the door. My approach to treatment is rooted in the belief that nothing in the body exists in isolation. I trained as an occupational therapist, which means I was taught from the beginning to look at the whole person — not just the diagnosis, but the life around it.
I want to build a practice where that kind of care is possible, unhurried, curious, and honest about the full color of what it means to live in a body.

