Why the Holidays Are the Most Popular Time to Conceive.

maude
3 min readDec 8, 2020

--

Christmas Eve is the most common conception date.

If Hallmark’s dominance on Christmas, a profusion of films from the early 2000s, and now, Netflix’s continued push into the realm of made-for-streaming rom-coms are to be believed, the holiday time is a time for love. Forget Valentine’s Day — late November through December may very well be the most romantic time of the year. And there’s one particularly compelling fact to back this up. According to data published by the New York Times in 2006, September 16 is the most popular birthday in the United States — a finding that The Atlantic resurfaced in 2012 to reveal something even more interesting: Christmas Eve is the most common conception date — and New Year’s Eve is up there, too.

Since then, the numbers have shifted ever so slightly (which doesn’t necessarily negate the evidence), but the nine out of ten of the most popular birthdays fall in between September 9 and 20 — which still means that the holiday season is a popular time for couples to consider expanding their families. So how exactly has a season that has its roots in religious celebration turned into a season for baby-making?

There is a relatively straightforward answer — at least, if you’re on the sentimental side. The holiday season is a time where the value of family is especially stressed. Just think of all the songs about all the songs that proclaim that there’s no place like home for the holidays, and all the social gatherings that are so common throughout the season. These short-term reminders of the value of familial bonds can very well be enough to spark the thought between a couple to get started on making their own family.

But it turns out there’s an evolutionary part in it, too: According to Smithsonian magazine, birth seasonality is common among all living things — not just people, but plants, mammals, and the like. Factors like the length of the days and temperature can cause a shift in birth rates — which is why summer and early autumn are rife with birthdays: Conception is more common in fall and winter. However, the publication notes that there are countless other factors to consider, including the fact that over the past few decades, birth seasonality has been weakening. This could simply be because of the increased access of birth control, reproductive education, and the fact that we have technology that those in the 1800s, when researchers first started studying birth seasonality, couldn’t even begin to imagine.

Still, though we may think of ourselves as highly evolved, there is something about shorter days, colder temperatures, and ritualistic holidays that can bring out more evolutionary behaviors. Of course we now have Netflix queues that can go on for day and days. But cuffing season still remains at the top of mind for many singles once the first few leaves start to fall in autumn.

The celebration of family during winter holidays and a new beginning with the New Year can be enough to put life into perspective to such a degree, that you decide that now is the time for you to bring a new life into the world yourself. But those hot toddies, screenings of The Holiday, and Mariah Carey’s ever-classic, ever-chart-topping declaration that Christmas is for lovers, most likely play a powerful role, too.

Originally published at https://getmaude.com.

--

--

maude
maude

Written by maude

A direct-to-consumer, modern sexual wellness brand, maude is on a mission to destigmatize sex through quality, simplicity, and inclusivity.

No responses yet