@lisajcoleman1 Trust the doctor. Twin B being transverse is pretty likely to end in a c-section. My boys were positioned the same way and I had a c-section at my doctor’s recommendation despite being absolutely terrified of surgery (and the c-section wasn’t bad at all - I was so scared beforehand but it turned out to be so easy).
I just want to give some unsolicited advice so feel free to ignore. Having a detailed natural birth plan is going to end in disappointment. Babies don’t follow plans, especially twins. Sticking to a birth plan against doctor’s recommendations is dangerous. In a high risk pregnancy/delivery (and twins are always high risk), your birth plan should be “get both babies out safely”.
My first pregnancy was a singleton. Textbook pregnancy, no complications. I had a birth plan: go into labor naturally, no epidural, walk around during labor, push on hands and knees. Well, that all went out the window. Baby decided to hang around an extra week and a half and his scan showed deteriorating placental activity, so I was induced. My body was stubborn and didn’t want to cooperate with be induced so I ended up in labor for 30 hours. Around hour 18 I was so tired and in pain I got the epidural. Couldn’t walk after that, nor could I push on hands and knees. Baby’s heart rate was dipping every contraction so I needed to be hooked up to the monitors constantly anyway. I managed to get him out without a c-section but my doctor said if he didn’t come within the next hour we’d be doing the surgery. I trusted her.
My baby was born completely healthy. My birth plan wasn’t followed at all. If it was and I wasn’t induced, my baby probably would not have survived.
Please trust your doctor. They’re the ones that do this every single day and have the experience. Remember that birth is a single event that brings the babies into the world, but then you get a lifetime with those babies and how they got here is irrelevant. Don’t risk that lifetime because of an imagined perfect birth.