Monday, April 18, 2005

Why Shaking the Family Tree can be Bad for your Health

Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter
Dick wrote:
I discovered an online article published by the Telegraph in London with a cute title of Why Shaking the Family Tree can be Bad for your Health. I thought to myself, "This should be a cute, tongue-in-cheek article." Wrong! Author Elizabeth Day is serious.


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www.telegraph.co.uk/
"Genealogists want psychotherapy to be made available for people who stumble across unpleasant discoveries while researching their family history.
The Society of Genealogists is one of several organisations concerned that amateur historians are not sufficiently prepared for the secrets they might uncover in their family records, and could need counselling to help them through the emotional process.

Else Churchill, a genealogy officer at the society, said: 'People can be dealing with many serious things - from discovering your ancestor was a rapist who was deported to Australia to finding out you are adopted. Burying secrets causes problems and you have to be incredibly sensitive when dealing with such issues.
'Having trained counsellors on hand could help. My job as a genealogist ends when I have put the whats and the whos together, but there needs to be a continued support.

'Many of Britain's four million amateur genealogists will end up discovering illegitimacy, bigamy, adoption and previously unknown relatives in the course of their research.
Diane Mattinson, 48, an office manager from Bicester, Oxfordshire, discovered that her great-grandfather, James Phillips, had never married her great-grandmother, Elizabeth. " continues

and ends

There are those, however, who might be disappointed if they fail to find some dark secret.
Last year, a survey conducted by 1837online.com, a genealogical website, found that 10 per cent of amateur historians hope to unearth a family skeleton.

which gives a little spice to their hobby

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