About Dr. Wendy

Making women's health make sense

Dr. Wendy is a Doctor of Physical Therapy specializing in women's health with a particular passion for helping women understand their bodies across every life stage.

After more than a decade in clinical practice, she noticed the same pattern: women were arriving with symptoms they'd had for years, normalized because research is largely male-focused and no one had ever told them they deserved better. She uses her platform to change that.

Physical therapist hands-on treatment

The longer story

Growing up, nobody talked about pelvic floors. Leaking after kids? Normal, apparently. Pain during sex? Just something you managed. Feeling pressure downstairs? Probably nothing. It wasn't until Dr. Wendy entered clinical training that she realized just how much women had been told to simply tolerate.

She built her clinical practice around a different premise: symptoms that are common are not automatically normal, and most of them respond remarkably well to the right intervention. Her work has helped thousands of women regain confidence, comfort, and capacity in their bodies.

The digital platform grew out of a recognition that clinical care has reach limits. Not everyone can access a specialist. Not everyone can afford private care. Not everyone lives near someone with the right training. These tools are designed to extend what good clinical education can do—meeting women wherever they are.

Dappled light — Passion Led Us Here

Credentials

  • Doctorate, Physical Therapy (DPT), University of St. Augustine
  • Masters, Physical Therapy (MPT), Andrews University
  • BS, Athletic Training, Cedarville University
  • Certification, Myofascial Trigger Point Therapist (CMTPT)
  • Certification, Manual Therapy (MTC), University of St. Augustine
  • Board-Certified Athletic Trainer

Values

Evidence first

Clinical decisions should be grounded in the best available research—combined with clinical expertise and patient values. No exceptions.

Clarity over jargon

Medical information shouldn't require a medical degree to understand. Clear, accessible language is a form of respect.

Practical always

Knowledge is only useful when it translates to real action. Every guide, program, and talk is designed with real life in mind.

Whole person

Pelvic health doesn't exist in isolation. Bodies, minds, and lives are interconnected—good care reflects that.

Want to work together?

Speaking, partnerships, or just a question.