All your internal organs are connected to the inside cavity of your body in a relatively stable way, leaving room for movement. They move all the time, in fact- they don't move all over the place, but they can shift and adjust. For example, the stomach alone can sometimes occupy 4 times the amount of space when full than it normally does when empty. Things shift and accommodate for the extension as it fills.
As for "relocation", she must have been boiling down a much larger physiological cause into layman terms, because internal organs don't "relocate". It may stretch the sphincter that is normally closed off to contain the urine within the bladder, making it possible for it to "leak" a little at times, and that is likely what she meant. She may also have meant it as a short-term effect, either from that cause or from the physical contraction of muscles during sex, the muscles' contractions causing things to shift from their normal positions. The contraction/relaxation of all muscles in the abdomen shift the contents slightly, and a lot of rough sex may leave those muscles tensed, pushing things around that aren't normally "pushed", because those muscles are normally more relaxed.
In the end, all organs are attached to the inside body cavities, not "free-floating" by any means- they do not "relocate" in literal terms.
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