Thank you to all those who pointed out that "up and running" is an expression: I have an honors degree in English Literature.
When I had my CS, there were eight women in my ward - all with C-sections. Not one of us was comfortably out of bed the next day. Two of us were restricted to the bed for 24 hours after the surgery.
I think to describe the aftermath of a CS as 'easy' and to say that you are in any way back to normal after 24 hours is at best, wishful thinking, and at worst, irresponsible when you are trying to give accurate information to someone trying to make the choice between a CS and VB.
Women's bodies are, on the whole and in general, built to give birth. I hear a lor of nonsense in HK about how Chinese women are 'small' and therefore need CS and an episiotemy. Wouldn't common sense along tell you that if Chinese women are 'small' then so are their babies?
There are many reasons why HK has one of the highest CS rates in the world, and I very much doubt it is because women here are 'smaller' or more in danger than their ethnic counterparts in other parts of the world. Why do so many women let the medical profession convince them that their bodies are in some way not innately capable of this natural act?
If you can have a VB, why on earth wouldn't you want to have one? Why would you want layers and layers of medical intervention with all the inherent risks? If you want an easier birth, have gas, massage, and an epidural. (Even an epidural raises the chance of needing a forceps or suction assisted delivery.)
It's easy to talk of CS as a choice, but there are responsibilites that go with that choice - such as a risk of the surgeon scraping the baby, or your uterine/rectal wall, and a much higher risk of infection. Of course there are risks with any birth - but surely the choice should be mostly based on medical reasons, not emotional ones.
And I say all this as a woman who had a very painful CS. If I have another, I will be doing my utmost to have a VB - despite a long history in HK of women being told that VB after CS is 'too difficult.'
I am sorry if any of this offends - perhaps what I find most interesting is that talking amongst friends, I never hear anyone descrive a CS as 'easy' - yet on this site, that word crops up all the time. Is calling a CS 'easy', 'easier' or 'not painful' a way for some women to somehow try and vaildatate the choice they made to have medically unnecessary major surgey?