Overactive Bladder 101: Simple First Steps to Take Back Control

Written by Sarah Boyles

On September 8, 2025
Overactive Bladder 101: Simple First Steps to Take Back Control for the Womens Bladder Doctor

Overactive Bladder 101: Simple First Steps to Take Back Control

Leaking urine or constantly feeling like you “have to go” can be overwhelming. Many women cycle through denial, frustration, and even acceptance, thinking they simply have to live with overactive bladder (OAB), also known as urgency urinary incontinence.

But here’s the truth: OAB is common, manageable, and treatable. The first step is understanding your symptoms and learning the foundational techniques that can make a big difference.

Step 1 – Keep a Bladder Diary

Knowledge is power, and the bladder diary is your starting point.
A bladder diary involves recording:

  • What and when you drink
  •  Foods you eat
  •  Trips to the bathroom
  •  Urgency or leaking episodes

Why it works: Patterns emerge. Coffee, sparkling water, tomato-based foods, and artificial sweeteners are common triggers, but every woman’s list is unique.

Tip: Test one trigger at a time. That way, you’ll know what really affects you instead of cutting out everything at once.

 Step 2 – Strengthen Your Pelvic Floor

Your pelvic floor muscles form a supportive “bowl” from hip to hip and from pubic bone to tailbone. These muscles:

  • Hold up your pelvic organs
  • Control your sphincters (keeping you dry)
  • Respond reflexively during bladder contractions

Strengthening them through Kegel exercises is a proven first-line treatment.

  • On your own: Works if you can do contractions correctly and stay consistent for 3–6 months.
  • With tools: Vaginal weights or app-based trainers add feedback and motivation.
  • With a pelvic floor PT: The gold standard, direct assessment, tailored exercises, and accountability.

Step 3 – Master Urge Suppression

When the sudden “gotta go” feeling strikes, try this urge suppression technique:

  1. Stop where you are.
  2. Do 5 quick pelvic floor squeezes (Kegels).
  3. Take a calming breath: inhale 4, hold 2, exhale 8.
  4. Distract yourself with a relaxing thought (like swinging in a hammock).

This reflexive approach helps your bladder relax. With practice, you’ll find the urge passes, and you can walk, not run, to the bathroom.

Step 4 – Bladder Retraining

Bladder retraining helps your bladder “unlearn” its urgency habits. Instead of going whenever you feel the urge, you follow a timed schedule:

  • Start by going every 90 minutes.
  • Stick with that schedule for 3 days.
  • Add 15 minutes to your interval.
  • Repeat until you reach a comfortable, sustainable routine.

This gradual process teaches your bladder to stretch and reduces constant trips to the bathroom.

Why First-Line Therapy Matters

These strategies take effort and consistency, but they often reduce or even resolve symptoms without medication or procedures. And if you eventually need additional treatments, doing this groundwork makes those treatments more effective.

Final Thoughts

Living with urgency incontinence is not something you have to accept. By keeping a bladder diary, strengthening your pelvic floor, practicing urge suppression, and retraining your bladder, you can take meaningful steps toward freedom and confidence.

Remember: progress takes time, usually 3–6 months. Be patient with yourself, you’re building long-term control.

Get my BLADDER DIARY Here

 

Ready to take back control over your bladder?

Take my Self-Diagnosis Quiz to find out why you are leaking and start making changes towards a more fulfilled life!

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