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How important is your family history or lineage to you?

Rideauxb 7 May 25
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29 comments

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5

In my teens and twenties I was zealous in tracking down my genealogical roots. I think I was looking for a sense of place that I'd never felt growing up. I can see where it may benefit me for medical reasons, but otherwise it's just interesting. My family are the people I've chosen to be in my life, and I'm who I make myself to be.

4

Outside of curiosity, it means nothing. I got excited when I found out that our family line goes back to one of the first convicts sent to Australia from England.

@Faithless1 I know. I remember when it was considered to be an embarrassment which is why I had a bit of a giggle when I found out many years later how it had become a badge of honor to have a convict in the family. Oh how the time's change.

3

I have no lineage. I was adopted and never cared anything about my birth parents. Between having a tie to the past and leaving one's footprints in the sands of time -- it seems people more time not in the present.

3

Eh, I don’t care. Especially with no descendents remaining. I’m just the broken off remnants of a decayed limb. I know the last couple of generations and heard stories of maybe the two previous to them. Then I skip many generations before I get to the first blue eyed mutant. But yeah, I don’t care.

3

I got involved in my family lineage for two reasons. Being a great grandson of people who died in the holocaust, I want a ed to find if any of them survived. And my father left when I was young child, I never knew about his family and where they were from.

Before I started doing the research, I would have told you I was from Russian, German, and Irish immigrants that arrived here in the states around the turn of the century. On my mother family, I was correct, but on my father's side. I found myself traveling back through the history of this country and beyond.

The most interesting thing I found, that I am the descendant of Mary Boleyn.

3

No importance at all and I have no family left above me - but I do have a name that only four other people in england have, which makes me smile.

What is it, what is it?!?!

@smoyle now if I told you that you'd know everything about me wouldnt you but a clue is in French it means a political bribe

@jacpod your name is Wine Jar?!

@smoyle- and a wine jar could be?

3

Not really important to me.

3

I was adopted as a baby and have not made any move to find my birth parents. I promised my mom I wouldn't so I intend to honor that promise as long as she lives.

3

Outside of the people l actually knew or know, not important.

3
2

Fam history/lineage is very important to me. I'm part of a diaspora, and we know a lot about our roots and origins. The last 3 generations in my family all identify similarly in regards to faith and atheism though, so I think that makes it easy for me to embrace my history/lineage/roots. We are culturally still keeping up the traditions of our people though. Just not religiously.

2

Not important at all, but I'm interested in history, my own included.

2

I have done some family research on Ansestry.com and while it was interesting and impressive, it had no affect on my life.

2

Important? No. Interesting yes.

2

It’s important to know where you come from. Funny story, since I was a child I was told that my grandpa was Italian. So I always said I was black and Italian. I took one of those 23andMe test. Turns out I am 0% Italian. Really shatters what you think you knew about yourself.

You may still have Italian heritage - the reliability of these DNA testing firms has been called into question recently!

23andMe blames human error for DNA mix-up [zdnet.com]
Some Genetic Tests Apparently Can’t Tell If You’re Dog Or Human [futurism.com]

@Jnei lol really? I didn’t know that. Only reason I assume it’s correct is because my grandpa took one without any of us knowing it and his didn’t come back with any Italian either (found his out after I took my test). It said he was actually Irish. So now I’m Black and Irish ☘️ lol

2

Not important in the slightest.

Quite interesting, but not important.

1

Zero... I had NO say in where I came from, I prefer to know where I'm going...

Hutch Level 7 May 26, 2018
1

My aunt (father's sister) was an ancestry buff; she always was "discovering" something about the old family in France. She was very excited to find out that two members of her family (mother side) -who were the 1st. Atheists in the family and had separated from the others for that reason- had arrived in Argentina few years before her great-grandparents...also from France....she even found we had a farrrrrrrrr removed relative who was the companion of a rich upper class French lady (1700s?).
Gee, I guess all of these justify my nick ...LOL

1

Not important to me at all. Could be very interesting though. I'd love to discover I had Norse ancestry so I could justify some cool Viking tattoos!

1

Genealogically it has no allure for me. Genetically it had some importance but I've settled that with testing.

1

Completely unimportant.

1

I would like to know where my family came from. My father got as far back as 1750 and then the trail went cold. I often think of DNA testing to get a general idea but I'm suspicious that they might be telling people any old story because they can't check it themselves.

1

Perhaps,doing research about a mutation in the family,say everyone had brown eyes and blue eyes appear, who,and when.

1

Not at all.

1

Not really important. Unless I'm one of the Rothschilds.

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