Choice is an interesting thing - it implies that you are doing what you want, but sometimes the best choice and choice you want to make are two different things.
When I had my son almost 11 months ago I chose to have an elective c-section. It was so far from the birth I wanted that in the past year I have gone over and over my decision, wondered about what ifs, ultimately to wind up in the same place each time; telling myself off for being so ungrateful. How can you feel disappointed when you have a beautiful, healthy baby? How can you be disappointed when you are healthy and relatively unscarred? How can you be disappointed when there are women all over the world with such limited access to maternity care? How dare you be disappointed?! It's so, so ungrateful.
And yet I am.
Not because I don't think the right decision was made, when Quinn was delivered he weighed 10lb 9oz, he was posterior and a brow presentation. I had been having contractions for a week before my section, strong ones for the 6 hours immediately before with no progress and a distressed baby - there was meconium in the waters. Like I said, I feel we made the right choice.
No, I think that I am disappointed because you get primed to think that if you make the right choices - you get the outcome you want. And I thought I had - I had a good LMC, I went to pregnancy massage to try and convince my baby to move, I bought the pink kit, slept on the left side and watched tv on my hands and knees, I was young, relatively fit.... But in the end it comes down to chance, you are dealt your cards you can only decide how to play them. That was my mistake; I thought I could choose the cards.
So if we are lucky and there is another pregnancy and another baby and we get to do this all over again, I will hope for a better hand to be dealt my way. If that doesn't happen and I don't get to try for the natural birth I so badly wanted - then, well I will try not to be disappointed with my decisions.