Exactly. Enough going on in our lives without inviting any more! 🙄
Robert Kenyon, Reform's candidate for Makerfield. Would you let him in your house?
Nicola Sturgeons husband pleads guilty.
Things Ain't What They Used To Be
I did my DH family tree and a couple of years ago did his DNA. A couple of years ago a distant relative got in touch to ask how they were related. She seems to be a granddaughter or great granddaughter of my DH grandfather's sister. She sent me loads of stuff by email of stuff not really relevant to us.
She has moved to a town just a few miles away and keeps sending emails to meet up.
How would you politely decline? My DH isn't really interested and I don't want to be rude about it. The connection is too distant to meet up.
I know some might say meet up but neither of us is really interested. We have found enough close family that have been enough for us without adding more.
Exactly. Enough going on in our lives without inviting any more! 🙄
I have sent her a polite and friendly email outlining the exact connection between my DH and her. I have told her that I cancelled my subscription with Ancestry for the time being as I found all the information for both me and DH that we wanted. I also mentioned that my 2 daughters are not interested and my DH has no children of his own. His half brother and sisters are not interested as they are mostly of Ghanaian descent. I just ended with that I hope this helped with her research. I didn't say anything about meeting up.
Fair enough.
I ll meet her 🤣🤣🤣
My maternal grandfather was brought up in an orphanage from the age of two His parents had died in an epidemic in Liverpool. On the orphanage records there were siblings admitted at the same time However according to my mum there were non that she knew of. I would be really pleased to know if any of them survived
Grammaretto
Patsy that reminds me of when my research was at its height, back in 1990s. I told mum what I was doing only to be told:
Please don't find me any more cousins, I don't like the ones I have!
I’ve met relations from all over the world, it surprises me how similar lives they lead, I visited Australia in January and called in to see relatives that I had never met, they had never been to the UK, lovely people, as all the others have been.
I didn’t do all the family history myself cousin Paul a retired police officer did a lot of the difficult tracing and Im confident the male and female lines are all accounted for.
Gwyllt
My maternal grandfather was brought up in an orphanage from the age of two His parents had died in an epidemic in Liverpool. On the orphanage records there were siblings admitted at the same time However according to my mum there were non that she knew of. I would be really pleased to know if any of them survived
Have you considered trying to find them on a site such as Ancestry or FindmyPast, or through Free BMD?
I come from families that have really enjoyed keeping in touch with many branches- so I find it rather sad that others don’t have the same interest. This person would probably be your second cousins? That’s quite close really. I’d be delighted to find more and I recently found another second cousin that I knew nothing about - not only that but he lives in the same small town!! I would definitely keep in touch if I were you🤗🤗
Patsy70
Harsh as it may sound, I am very happy with my very close family, extended family and close friends. I don’t feel the need to meet up with any more ‘relatives’.
That is the issue here. You may have plenty of family but some people have no family and are looking for a family. As an only child of an only child I was desperate for a family, and searched for relatives through family history. I found a third cousin who was a wonderful person and we were like sisters until she died.
Spare a thought for the other person who might just be looking for some biological relatives.
This has happened to me four times now in around six years - it’s natural for people especially if they’re younger to want to learn more about their ancestry if they get a match with an older relative - and I’m glad that I responded positively to all four because one was actually older than me and was able to fill in an information gap while the others much younger I’ve been able to give them information and out them in touch with other family members who have the energy for this type of research. I personally wouldn’t refuse and definitely not block her - that’s a great way to convince her that her extended family aren’t very nice people - it won’t take much from you to say to her that you tire easily and can’t make visits out for coffee etc but offer to provide her with tea and cakes on an afternoon to suit you. She can either accept or reject and if she accepts what’s an afternoon out of your life?
Chestnut I m an only child of an only child and have absolutely loved finding second, third, seventh, eighth cousins There is a link , it might last one or two letters, it might last a couple or more meet ups but there is a LINK forever
The worst rejection I ever got was a man who actually still lived in the same street my ancestors lived in and he could have told me so much but I got a ‘ don’t bother to contact me again I m not interested ‘ so I didn’t but felt a real rejection
Don’t do that moonwatcher
BlueBelle
I ll meet her 🤣🤣🤣
Me too🤣🤣
I am a keen genealogist and I live in city/country from which distant relatives emigrated. Now I am wary of 'ancestry tourists' having hosted one couple for several weeks. I have no interest in visiting them in far off Boise Idaho!
That's nice Moonwatcher1904. Hopefully she'll take the hint.
I went to the funeral of a fairly distant relative a few years ago. I didn't know her but she had been kind to my mother and visited her a few times. Her mother was my father's favourite aunt and I knew my long-dead parents would have been pleased for me to go.
Since then a distant cousin has phoned sometimes to keep in touch. I dread his calls, he isn't somebody who would ever be a friend and I would love to shake him off, but fortunately he is very unlikely to visit us.
BlueBelle
Chestnut I m an only child of an only child and have absolutely loved finding second, third, seventh, eighth cousins There is a link , it might last one or two letters, it might last a couple or more meet ups but there is a LINK forever
The worst rejection I ever got was a man who actually still lived in the same street my ancestors lived in and he could have told me so much but I got a ‘ don’t bother to contact me again I m not interested ‘ so I didn’t but felt a real rejection
Don’t do that moonwatcher
I have made contact with so many relatives through my research and people these days often just have a passing interest in family history. The ones you can build a relationship with are those who have been doing their family history since the 1990s or earlier. They are dedicated researchers and know what it really means to 'search the records'. I have made friends with a few of those and I treasure them. Usually you have an intense period of exchanging information and photos with them which eventually ends, but you can always contact them again because you have formed a lasting bond. The amount of information and old photos I have picked up from other researchers is phenomenal, so much more than I ever had myself.
I think its a shame that you think the connection is too distant to meet up. It shouldn't make a difference.
If you were interested enough to trace family trees and do DNA etc. I don't then understand why you are not interested in taking it to its conclusion.
I think you have rather left yourself open to this level of enquiry. When you registered your husband on the DNA website what did you think would happen?
How does your relative know she only lives a few miles away from you? You must have provided your details in some form or another.
I think it is only courtesy to meet for a coffee and a chat. You don't have to do it again.
I have been researching my family tree for almost 50 years - long before 'instant family trees' from sites like Find my Past and Ancestry; I joined Family History groups for the county my family were from - and with contacts I wrote to and who wrote to me discovered masses of additional information. We arranged 'family reunions' for several of the names we were researching and they were lovely. I have had masses of copies of old family photos sent to me. One event we held was to celebrate the 200th wedding anniversary of a couple we were descended from - we held this at the village inn where they had lived. I do think that now people are not so interested in 'finding out more' but just gathering as many 'names' as they can and that 'trees' are not very accurate. One photo I received was of my grandmother in a 'uniform' I didn't recognise and dated 1917 - I discovered that she was wearing the uniform of the Women's Land Army in WW1!
Another discovery was the family of an ancestor who was transported for stealing a sheep - he left a wife and child here but married again in NSW and had a large family there, and prospered. Some have been over to visit and I loved showing them where their several times gt grandfather had lived
I have what seems to be a distant cousin on GN and I greatly value that connection, as I hope she knows.
Super Tinny
100% correct.
She won't miss not meeting up with you
I do think your response was very unpleasant.
GSM
Thanks for that but what does BMD stand for
Actually I do have a lovely story about my Pop it’s amazing what he achieved considering his start in life
With the post It just crossed my mind what happened to his sibs as in the 1880s I believe many children in orphanages were sent abroad to places such as Canada And haven’t thought about it for many years
I asked about the abbreviation as I had done quite a bit about house histories What with Covid any my health issues had put out present house investigation on hold
Must get back to it
Births marriages and deaths Gwyllt
Thanks
Just say you can’t be bothered with her as you aren’t a nice person!!!
But would it kill you to meet her?
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