Deep pain during or after sex
Start with Modules 1, 2, and 4 if the pain feels deep in the pelvis, happens with penetration or certain positions, and may flare afterward as well.
Then open: Sex, Pelvic Floor, and Intimacy Guide.
InsideHer Learning
A patient guide to pain during or after sex, pelvic floor tension, fear of penetration, intimacy strain, and how to get support without feeling dismissed or blamed.
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Endometriosis can cause deep pain during or after sex, but that is not the whole story for everyone. Pelvic floor tension, bladder or bowel pain, vaginal dryness, fear of pain, and stress around intimacy can overlap. This course is here to help you understand the pattern and ask for the right support.
A Good Working Rule
Quick Start
If you do not want to read everything in order, start with the kind of pain or intimacy problem that is causing the most distress right now.
Start with Modules 1, 2, and 4 if the pain feels deep in the pelvis, happens with penetration or certain positions, and may flare afterward as well.
Then open: Sex, Pelvic Floor, and Intimacy Guide.
Start with Modules 1, 2, and 3 if your body braces, penetration feels impossible or unsafe, or pain has made you tense before intimacy even starts.
Then open: Sex, Pelvic Floor, and Intimacy Guide.
Start with Modules 3, 5, and 6 if the biggest barrier is not only the pain itself but how hard it feels to explain it without shame or pressure.
Then open: Endometriosis Treatment Decision Guide.
Start with Modules 2, 4, and 6 if the main issue is that pain, avoidance, anxiety, or relationship strain are building up and the current support is not enough.
Then open: Symptom Tracking and Appointment Prep.
Best Use
Deep pain, entrance pain, pelvic floor guarding, post-sex flares, dryness, fear, avoidance, and relationship tension can overlap. Naming the pattern clearly often makes support more specific and more useful.
Module 1
Pain during intimacy is not one single symptom. Some people feel deep pelvic pain. Some feel burning or sharp pain at the entrance. Some mainly flare afterward. Others feel their body brace before sex even begins because it expects pain.
Pain deeper in the pelvis during or after penetration can fit with endometriosis, pelvic inflammation, adhesions, or deeper pelvic pain patterns.
Pain around the vaginal opening, marked tightness, or feeling like penetration is not possible may suggest pelvic floor tension, vulvovaginal pain, dryness, or several factors together.
Some people feel okay during intimacy but develop pelvic pain, cramping, bladder pain, or flares afterward. That pattern matters too.
Module 2
NICE lists deep pain during or after sexual intercourse as an endometriosis symptom. But not all sex-related pain comes from the same source. Pelvic floor tension, vulvovaginal pain, bladder pain, and persistent pelvic pain can overlap.
Pain deeper in the pelvis may relate to lesions, inflammation, adhesions, bowel or bladder involvement, or more generalized pelvic pain.
Repeated pain can lead the pelvic floor muscles to stay guarded and tense, which may make penetration, exams, tampon use, or recovery afterward more painful.
Stress, fear, shame, relationship strain, and anticipating pain can worsen muscle tension and reduce arousal, which can make pain feel even more unavoidable.
Important
It means more than one thing may need support at the same time. Treating only the structural side or only the emotional side is often not enough.
Module 3
The goal is not to force yourself into sex more skillfully. The goal is to reduce pain, reduce pressure, and build intimacy in a way that feels safer and more honest.
If penetration is painful, it is reasonable to pause it, change the plan, or focus on forms of intimacy that do not trigger pain.
Lubricants, a slower build-up, stopping early, changing positions, and using warmth or relaxation beforehand may help some people.
If pain or flares happen afterward, it may help to build in time for rest, heat, hydration, and a calmer recovery plan rather than pretending it does not happen.
Module 4
ACOG advises seeing a clinician if pain during sex is frequent or severe, and it is important to rule out gynecologic causes. If you already have endometriosis, sex-related pain should still be reviewed rather than written off as part of the package.
Worsening deep pain, post-sex flares, bowel or bladder pain with sex, or pain that is spreading into the rest of life all deserve attention.
If exams, tampons, or sex feel increasingly difficult because of tightness or fear, pelvic floor support may need to be part of the conversation.
Avoidance, distress, relationship conflict, and feeling disconnected are valid reasons to ask for more support.
Module 5
This can be one of the hardest parts. Many people minimize the pain because they do not want to upset a partner or because they worry a clinician will dismiss it.
Module 6
It helps if you can describe the pattern specifically, even if it feels awkward. You do not need a perfect explanation, just a clearer one.
Printable Shortcut
Open the printable Sex, Pelvic Floor, and Intimacy Guide if you want a calmer summary to save or bring to an appointment.