Anthropology
Related: About this forumOver the holidays, try talking to your relatives like an anthropologist
Published: December 16, 2022 8.14am EST
How is it possible to spend so much time with your parents and grandparents and not really know them?
This question has puzzled me as an anthropologist. Its especially relevant for the holiday season, when millions of people travel to spend time with their families.
When my parents were alive, I traveled long distances to be with them. We had the usual conversations: what the kids were doing, how the job was going, aches and pains. It wasnt until after my parents died, though, that I wondered whether I really knew them in a deep, rich and nuanced way. And I realized that Id never asked them about the formative periods of their lives, their childhoods and teenage years.
What had I missed? How had this happened?
In fact, I had interviewed my mother a few years before her death. But I only asked her about other relatives people I was curious about because my fathers job had taken us to places away from the rest of the family. I based my questions for my mother on the bit of information I already had, to build a family tree. You might say I didnt know what I didnt know.
I decided to research the kinds of questions that would have elicited from my mother things about her life that I had no clue about and that now remain hidden and lost forever. I interviewed older people to develop questions that would paint a vivid picture of a persons life as a child and teenager. I wanted details that would help me see the world that had influenced the person they became.
More:
https://theconversation.com/over-the-holidays-try-talking-to-your-relatives-like-an-anthropologist-195637
pandr32
(12,238 posts)I already ordered the book.
Thank you for posting this.
Solly Mack
(93,067 posts)like growing up the baby in the family of so many sisters. I asked her how she felt about her parents and siblings. Things about her teenage years. Her young adult years. Her first love. All kinds of things.
After she died, I still had more questions.
Never enough time.
Still, I was glad I asked her all those questions.
mgardener
(1,900 posts)My dad died when I was 10.
He would not talk to me about his experiences in WW11.
The only thing I remember him saying is " never volunteer".
I found out years later that he volunteered as a senior in high school.
Any boy who did that automatically graduated.
Tree Lady
(12,205 posts)He told my daughter's boyfriend who had just joined Air Force stories about him being in the war. I had never heard any of these stories.
One story was he was a gunner and he watched his best friend another gunner on other side of him get killed. I'm Sorry he couldn't share this pain.
Or the time in basic training where he got so drunk his friends tied him to a pole so he wouldn't get in trouble.
Rhiannon12866
(223,448 posts)But I lost her in 1998 and there are still so many questions I wish I'd asked.
GreenWave
(9,325 posts)Good morning Propliopithecus!
Judi Lynn
(162,491 posts)GreenWave
(9,325 posts)once they left our branch to join the orangs.
cachukis
(2,722 posts)samnsara
(18,290 posts)Altho I didnt do that, I did ask my father ( who was struggling with Parkinsons at the time) about his time in Korea. We were watching MASH and I asked him about the MASH units he saw when he served. Im glad I did. I remember mom looking at me and smiling..she was saying 'thank you'...
Both passed about 18 months later...
nuxvomica
(12,936 posts)So I had heard all about what life was like then, mostly to underline the fact that my life was easier than theirs had been. And it had the desired effect: I believe in social and economic justice and don't understand why other people don't.
erronis
(16,999 posts)Nice probing questions about what do you like/hate? Why do you hate so much? Do you have any facts to back up your rantings?
Stuff like that....
oldfart73
(72 posts)Warpy
(113,131 posts)I knew a lot about how my mother grew up surrounded by psychos. My dad didn't talk much about his formative years but I did read the diary he kept in 1931 when he was a teenager hustling pennies and nickels for movie and baseball money. He and his brothers were known around town as "those hellions."
I did get to know them as people, but it took uninstalling the buttons they loved to push. Once they realized those buttons didn't work any more, they relaxed into being themselves. It was a gift.
Anyway, neither had a leg to stand on when it came to criticizing my own teenager from hell years. They knew it and I knew it.