What Can a DNA Test Really Tell Me?
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The blood remembers, but it does not speak in names. In this sitting I tell you plainly what a test can give you and what it cannot. It can point toward the regions and peoples your ancestors came from, connect you to living cousins, and trace the deep paternal and maternal lines back across the water. What it cannot do is hand you an ancestor's name, or a certificate of kingship, or a nation you may claim by percentage alone. An estimate is not a person. I'll show you how to let the science guide your search without letting it flatter you — how it points toward home without naming the door.
Resources for this episode:
- AncestryDNA — ancestry.com — the largest matching database, strongest for finding cousins.
- 23andMe — 23andme.com — ethnicity estimates plus health; includes deep maternal (mtDNA) and paternal (Y-DNA) haplogroup information.
- FamilyTreeDNA — familytreedna.com — the main home for dedicated Y-DNA (father's line) and mtDNA (mother's line) tests, and their surname/lineage projects.
- MyHeritage DNA — myheritage.com — useful for matches with relatives outside the U.S.
- Free tools: Upload your raw DNA data to GEDmatch (gedmatch.com) and DNA Painter (dnapainter.com) to compare across databases and map matches to your tree.
- Remember: an estimate is not an ancestor. Use DNA as a compass, chase the cousin matches, and lay the results beside the documents — the paper is what proves the line.
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