@boby777 YOU ARE NOT A FAILURE. You did NOTHING wrong, this is not your fault AT ALL. Some women push babies out in a couple minutes, the fact you made ZERO progress in TWO HOURS shows that this was NOT a failure or lack of strength on your part. You did NOTHING wrong. You actually did everything right. This shows how STRONG you are, you pushed for TWO HOURS and then had major fucking surgery. You're a goddamn hero.
Honestly, sounds really similar to my first birth, except I didn't have a fever. I pushed for two hours with zero progress, and then had a c-section. It just happens some times! I only wish you felt the way I did after mine, I KNEW I had done all I could, I knew that in only a short period back in human history, my birth would have ended really really badly, so though I was jealous I had a much harder recovery, I was at peace with all that had happened.
Women have always needed C-sections, they just didn't used to exist.
The way you feel is why I am so vocal about the need for us all to know WHY we have all these birth interventions, so we know we are NOT AT FAULT when we need them. These birth interventions were developed to save lives, because birth used to be one of the most dangerous thing women went through. I fully blame the natural birth movement, because they have put unmedicated vaginal births on a pedestal, as if it's a fucking trophy to get one, ignoring the reason why medical interventions in birth are NEEDED. (And yes, I fully acknowledge that the natural birth movement was needed to put mothers needs first, what I'm saying is that it's gone too far.)
If birth was about willpower, C-sections would not be needed.
In terms of vbac, that will be something to discuss with your birth team when you're pregnant next. It will depend on why the baby failed to progress (and again, you did NOTHING wrong). For me, they figured it was the shape of my pelvis and the fact my baby had a 90th percentile head, so I was given low odds of success, so I went with planned (and then my second baby ended up being 10lbs with a 99th percentile head, so I have ZERO regrets. 10/10 experience, planned c-sections are great.) Though even if you have low odds of success, you can still give a VBAD a go, and I do hope that all of us reassuring you that this c-section was NOT YOUR FAULT, and if you need another one, STILL NOT YOUR FAULT.
And if anyone shames you for having a c-section, send them my way and I'll chew them out. Honestly, it's one of my favorite things is to EDUCATE idiots on why c-sections are needed and NOT the easy way out.