this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2026
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Asklemmy

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For example, I'm like 0.01% Senegalese or something, but I wasn't raised by Senegalese people or by the culture, nor do I consider the percentage to be significant enough, so I would not consider myself to be Senegalese.

My dad says our ancestry test used to say he was ~48-50% Norwegian, but now my ancestry says it is around 3-4%. However, another test I paid for with my raw data detected Swedish ancestry around 22%. We were raised more with Norwegian stuff and Norwegian learning videos, though, so I consider myself and my dad Norwegian-American for sure, no matter what it says on the ancestry test because 1) IDK how true, but I heard ancestry tests can be bullshit and just estimate from regions. 2) Culture and identity is more than just a number percentage on a test. ๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ด

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[โ€“] Paragone@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Reincarnation can be significant.

Oh, & genetic-testing is notoriously inaccurate, unless one is paying-for 1000x oversampling..

100x oversampling is the bare-minimum I'd consider useful.

The reincarnation thing: my "home" is what my soul/continuum remembers as "home" from some life as a buddhist Himalayan monk, many centuries ago.

To say that I don't fit this modern world well is understatement.

Wrong values, wrong instincts, wrong frame-of-reference, wrong reactions, wrong everything.

Once I undertood it, then .. life made MUCH more sense.

My unconscious has been trying to make my world fit its memory of my ( previous-incarnation's ) world, & that's impossible.

Once that became understood, then adapting & outgrowing-the-problem could begin.

_ /\ _

[โ€“] may_be@thelemmy.club 1 points 1 day ago

That makes sense. I believe I was Brazilian and Norwegian in a past life