Ancestry Shuffled in DNA of Siblings?

  • From: Michael Reddy <michael@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "com ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2018 08:19:02 -0400

Hi,
Someone sent me this short article from National Geographic.  
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2018/03/dna-ancestry-test-siblings-different-results-genetics-science/
It says that, because of the way sperm and egg cells are created, “ancestry” (meaning things like “French,” “Lebanese,” “Irish,” etc) gets shuffled, to the point where even fraternal twins can have significantly different DNA.  Speaking about two male twins, it says

"Kat, for example, has 13 percent genetic ancestry from Italy and Greece, while Eddy has 23 percent, according to the tests. (By contrast, these six strangers have roughly the same genetic ancestry)

Has anybody on this list already heard about this and perhaps asked if it means anything to our work?
Is it possibly a partial reason why one sibling might inherit more impacts from, say, the potato Irish famine than another one?
My mother always told me I was “half German, 3/8th Irish, 1/16th French, and 1/16th Scotch.”  But perhaps those proportions are not that accurate?
Best,Michael
Michael Reddy, PhDCPCmichael@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx   610 469 7588www.reddyworks.comRelieving Chronic Emotional/Physical Suffering usingFamily Constellations | Core Energy Coaching | EFT | Shamanism


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