I wouldn’t expect Wizards to be big fans of birth control or abortion.
Why not?
There are only thirty hours in a day and every child means greater demands on your time. It’s not like they can hire muggles to raise their kids, like affluent muggle families might hire less-affluent folk to look after theirs. And we don’t hear about anyone being raised by house elves.
Which is much less of an issue if your own parents and grandparents (and maybe even another generation) are around to dote on your children.
Except they’d also be around to dote on your nieces and nephews (who are also their grandchildren) and the children of your first cousins (since those children would be their great-grandchildren just as much as your own children would be). In fact, because they’re subject to multipliers as they go further up the family tree, they have evenlesstime for each child.
This does not make any stronger argument against desiring sex without conception, not does it weaken my “only thirty hours in a day” argument for sex without conception.
Which seems to be unknown to 7th year students of Hogwarts.
It was hard to muster a proper sense of indignation when you were confronting the same dignified witch who, twelve years and four months earlier, had given both of you two weeks’ detention after catching you in the act of conceiving Tracey.
Or you cast the spell after doing the deed, and that one time they were too busy fleeing/claiming this wasn’t what it looked like/getting castigated/getting dressed.
...just how many pregnancies has McGonagall caused, anyway?
This being a Potterverse it wouldn’t be something straightforward like the way a condom insulates against body heat or decreases sensation. It’d be that the semen is magically transported into a nearby container. If you don’t have a proper container prepared it ends up somewhere inconvenient like someone’s pocket, or outer ear, or mouth. Or that both parties must spend a moment beforehand concentrating on a blue sphere, or the smell of vomit, or the sound of breaking celery. Or maybe it just makes a lady’s feet numb.
So some people in some situations skip the contraceptive because they aren’t prepared or don’t want to deal with the complication.
More likely, parents got offended by the thought of that spell getting taught officially, and the (edit)Davises just missed out on the unofficial version?
“Remarkably”, no. But at a school where kids as young as 11 go, it’ll perhaps seem incongruous. And again, we have an example of a couple kids still in highschool conceiving a kid somewhere they got caught at it—if birth control was both easy and well-taught then that’s unlikely to have happened.
I had sex ed at that age. I think it was a remarkably unproductive use of time for most of the people in there. But there was a least one girl who was pregnant the next year, so it’s possible that it prevented further pregnancy.
Sex education does not prevent all pregnancy any more than driver’s education prevents all accidents. Kids both fuck and fuck up.
Why not?
There are only thirty hours in a day and every child means greater demands on your time. It’s not like they can hire muggles to raise their kids, like affluent muggle families might hire less-affluent folk to look after theirs. And we don’t hear about anyone being raised by house elves.
Why wouldn’t they want sex without conception?
Which is much less of an issue if your own parents and grandparents (and maybe even another generation) are around to dote on your children.
Except they’d also be around to dote on your nieces and nephews (who are also their grandchildren) and the children of your first cousins (since those children would be their great-grandchildren just as much as your own children would be). In fact, because they’re subject to multipliers as they go further up the family tree, they have even less time for each child.
This does not make any stronger argument against desiring sex without conception, not does it weaken my “only thirty hours in a day” argument for sex without conception.
Particularly since there’s almost certainly an easy spell for that.
Which seems to be unknown to 7th year students of Hogwarts.
Sigh. Magical education is seriously lacking.
Or you cast the spell after doing the deed, and that one time they were too busy fleeing/claiming this wasn’t what it looked like/getting castigated/getting dressed.
...just how many pregnancies has McGonagall caused, anyway?
Or maybe they simply wanted a child? That can happen at that age, even if it’s not all that common in our societies.
True. It’s not like having a child at that age will prevent them from going to college or have any particularly negative effects in the HPMORverse.
Edit: I accidentally a word there. Edit 2: And then I the put word in the wrong place.
Yes, but you generally don’t do the deed somewhere you can get caught if you’re actually a serious couple of that sort.
Wanting a child does not necessitate responsibility.
Perhaps it still has a drawback.
This being a Potterverse it wouldn’t be something straightforward like the way a condom insulates against body heat or decreases sensation. It’d be that the semen is magically transported into a nearby container. If you don’t have a proper container prepared it ends up somewhere inconvenient like someone’s pocket, or outer ear, or mouth. Or that both parties must spend a moment beforehand concentrating on a blue sphere, or the smell of vomit, or the sound of breaking celery. Or maybe it just makes a lady’s feet numb.
So some people in some situations skip the contraceptive because they aren’t prepared or don’t want to deal with the complication.
More likely, parents got offended by the thought of that spell getting taught officially, and the (edit)Davises just missed out on the unofficial version?
Have we heard of magical Britain being remarkably prudish in either MOR or canon?
“Remarkably”, no. But at a school where kids as young as 11 go, it’ll perhaps seem incongruous. And again, we have an example of a couple kids still in highschool conceiving a kid somewhere they got caught at it—if birth control was both easy and well-taught then that’s unlikely to have happened.
I had sex ed at that age. I think it was a remarkably unproductive use of time for most of the people in there. But there was a least one girl who was pregnant the next year, so it’s possible that it prevented further pregnancy.
Sex education does not prevent all pregnancy any more than driver’s education prevents all accidents. Kids both fuck and fuck up.
(Davises.)
Edited.