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Genealogy isn't for everyone (though there's never enough geology!!). Personally, I like the "paper" genealogy more than the genetics, as the paper trail is where the stories are. I guess I view it a lot like studying history. I'm interested in the stories of the past, how I/we got to where we are, even if I have no control over it.
And that makes sense to me. If I could, with ease, read an honest family history, I would. I am just not passionate enough about it to do any work. However, I can understand how somebody would be.
The little I know is interesting. For example, my Dad's father didn't like his father or farming (they were German immigrant farmers in the mid-west), so he came East in the early 1900s to make his way in the world. He met my grandmother - a Connecticut Yankee - who was disowned by her family for marring a first-generation, "nobody German." Since those two had only one child - my father - and both were alienated from their families, now that my grandparents and father are dead, I know not one relative from my father's side.
Had those two "rebels for their day" not met, I wouldn't be here (everyone, please, stop cheering). It's quite interesting, but again, for me, just not worth the effort.