To me, it means nothing. What matters is who *I* am, not who my ancestors were. I think this is probably the most popular view for people at my stage in life, and I fully expect to change my opinion about not caring in the future. It just doesn't interest me. However, it does interest almost every adult I know, which is why I expect my opinion to change.
However, I would say it means more to an adopted person to find out about your family history. Not your adopted family though, but your biological family. A lot of adopted people have a huge urge to find out about their biological family. If there isn't a way for them to do that then I'm surprised, to be honest.
Is it normal to want to know your biological roots?
← View full post
To me, it means nothing. What matters is who *I* am, not who my ancestors were. I think this is probably the most popular view for people at my stage in life, and I fully expect to change my opinion about not caring in the future. It just doesn't interest me. However, it does interest almost every adult I know, which is why I expect my opinion to change.
However, I would say it means more to an adopted person to find out about your family history. Not your adopted family though, but your biological family. A lot of adopted people have a huge urge to find out about their biological family. If there isn't a way for them to do that then I'm surprised, to be honest.
--
bananaface
11 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
It means nothing to me either:). I wonder what it is that might change our minds, if they ever do change.