I had a cs for my first baby. I got to 38 weeks, when the mw said she thought baby might be breech, and I should get a scan to check. Went for scan (after the weekend), was told she was feet first, they couldn't do ecv cos I was low on fluid, and they wanted me to stay in hosp and have her by cs the next day, cos of the risk of cord prolapse.
I'd been planning a homebirth, was a bit of a shock.
The op was fine, all very calm and straightforward, and I bf'd dd in the recovery room afterwards. Looking back, it was by far my best birth of 3! Getting up, having a shower and going to have a baby is fab.
But dd wasn't really ready to come out, and it was hard getting her to wake to feed. She was very small so that worried the docs a lot (turned out she was naturally small, still is, but they didn't know that then). We had a week in hospital, nasal feeding tube and me expressing. So much for the nice babymoon at home.
Probs came with the next pg. Do ask about/google the effects of a cs on a subsequent pg. It greatly increases your chances of placenta previa, which I've had twice now, resulting in premature babies (and ambulance rides and long hospital stays and emergency cs and blood transfusions and other scary stuff you don't want to know about).
www.nice.org.uk/CG013 - lots of info on cs, including possible effects on your health afterwards.
Apologies if this is waaay too much information. Caesareans are great life saving things - I wouldn't be here without them. And it may be totally the best thing for you. If I had to do it again I'd have a cs again. But if you do have a choice, it's good to make it an informed choice.
Here's hoping your baby does a somersault this week!
Have you searched on here for ways to get a breech baby to turn? There are quite a few things you can try.