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Men's Weekly

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Why Our Family History Is Important in Modern Times

  • Written by NewsServices.com

You may lead a fast-paced life and it might be challenging and time-consuming to balance your professional and personal life, but one of the things most of us make a priority is our relationship with our family. Even so, quite often, we are focused only on our closest family members, while staying insufficiently familiar with anything that has to do with our extended family and even less so with our ancestry. However, learning more about our family history can benefit us in many ways. Here are three main reasons for you to make an effort and find out as much as you can about where your family’s from and who is or was related to you.

It Gives You a Sense of Belonging

Belonging can have a huge impact on how your life is organized. In fact, most people try their best to belong to one group or another from the earliest of age. We want to belong to a sports team, a club, a group of friends or colleagues, but when it comes to our family, this intense need to belong becomes even more important to us. After all, even if it doesn’t always appear so, it’s still logical to expect that you have more in common with your family members than with other people. This is why discovering things about your family history is crucial. Not only has your family’s past probably had an effect on what your life is right now, but it’s likely influenced the lives of your other living relatives in a similar way, which is something that ties you together and hence deepens your sense of belonging. Furthermore, meeting some of the family members you haven’t had contact with yet, can enable you to make new bonds. Maybe you realize that you share particular traits, interests and even beliefs, and you end up getting along well, forming some new and significant relationships with them. When you know that you belong somewhere, you’ll feel more supported and less alone, which can manage your stress levels, contributing to your mental health in the process.

It Helps You Build Your Identity

There are many characteristics of an identity, and while there are some that are highly individual, there are still plenty of those that we inherit from our family in some way. Some excellent examples are race and ethnicity, but it isn’t uncommon that we also share various physical and personality attributes with some of our family members and even their religious beliefs. Knowing where your family came from can give you a strong sense of cultural identity, too. Also, learning about and relating to your family’s origins and the stories from your ancestors’ lives can help you establish your own identity. This is why you should try to find your family tree and, if your family came from abroad, perhaps travel to their motherland and get first-hand experience in their culture and customs. If this is too complicated for you, consider hiring a trustworthy genealogy specialists to assist you with your research into your family’s past. These professionals are proficient in finding out whatever it is that you want to know about your family, and they can even make sure you reconnect with lost family members around the globe.

It Can Tell You About Your Health

Aside from telling you what makes you unique and why you look like you do, genetics can also give you precious information about your health. This is another reason to examine your family history and try to meet as many of your relatives as you can, so that you can talk to them about potential disorders and illnesses that run through the family. When you know that there’s a chance of you developing a certain condition, you can get frequent screenings or run tests regularly. That way, if anything does go wrong, you’ll be able to expect it, catch it early enough and receive proper treatment for it. In addition, this also provides you with the opportunity to adjust your lifestyle, change some of your bad habits and establish some healthier ones, in order to prevent different illnesses, both physical and mental. Through conversations with your family members, close and distant ones, you can determine if there’s a genetic mutation you should be aware of, whether there are some rare diseases that run through your family and what some of the common conditions that affect their health, and possibly yours, are. Once you identify any health risks that could come from the genes you share with your family, you can look for specific ways to reduce those risks and perhaps avoid developing a disease in the first place.

When you give it some thought, it’s clear that you can’t really lose anything from digging into your family’s past and meeting your relatives, whereas you can gain a lot. If you do your best to take a glimpse into your family history and open yourself to new acquaintances and experiences, you could end up a happier, healthier and more fulfilled person.

Read more: Why Our Family History Is Important in Modern Times

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