The actual Good-Old Times associated with Birth control: Lemon-Peel Diaphragms and Beaver-Testicle Tea.
Birth control can be a hassle, but as a review of the history of contraception reveals, modern methods do not hold a candle to the hoops that people use to jump through in order to avoid unwanted pregnancies. Gentlemen, you never complained of office, as a film US government instructed the soldiers during the Second World War, "put it on before placing it in"? Perhaps you prefer a condom with fish or intestine of animals tied with a ribbon, as those employed in the 1600s you could store in a box by the bed to reuse again and again! Oh, but if you take the contents of that enclosure when sneak to visit a prostitute possibly pox- or clap-mounted, just remember: while the sperm can not pass through the pores of an animal intestine, the virus can. (At least you would be saving women from having to chug mercury, a method of last resort from 17 to terminate an unwanted pregnancy century.) And ladies, disgusted by the notion of protecting the cervix with animal excrement? Try some ...