12/06/2025
There's a simple mathematical formula that seems to explain where we come from.
You have 2 parents. They each had 2 parents, giving you 4 grandparents. Those 4 grandparents each had 2 parents, giving you 8 great-grandparents. The numbers double with each generation, climbing steadily backward through time.
Go back just eleven generations—roughly 300 years, about the time when the American colonies were being established—and the mathematics tells you that you should have 4,094 direct ancestors. That's 2 parents, plus 4 grandparents, plus 8 great-grandparents, all the way back through 2,048 ancestors in that eleventh generation alone.
It's a staggering number. And if you keep going backward, the numbers become absurd. Go back 20 generations to around the year 1400, and you'd theoretically have over one million ancestors. Go back 30 generations to around the year 1100, and you'd have over one billion ancestors—more people than were alive on Earth at that time.
Something doesn't add up.
And that's because the simple doubling formula, while mathematically correct on paper, misses something fundamental about how human families actually work.
The reality is far more interesting—and far more beautiful—than simple multiplication.
What the formula doesn't account for is something geneticists call "pedigree collapse."
Pedigree collapse happens when the same person appears in multiple places in your family tree. This occurs when relatives marry each other—and before you recoil at that thought, understand that we're talking about cousins, often distant cousins, marrying each other. Throughout most of human history, this wasn't just common—it was virtually inevitable.
Think about it. For most of human existence, people lived in small communities. Villages of a few hundred people. Towns where everyone knew everyone. Travel was difficult and rare. Most people married someone from their own community or a neighboring one.
When your 5th great-grandfather in one line of your family tree married his wife, there's a very good chance that she was also his third or fourth cousin. They might not have even known they were related—genealogical records weren't kept carefully, and family connections beyond a generation or two were often forgotten.
But genetically, biologically, mathematically—they were related.
This means that the same ancestor appears multiple times in your family tree. Your father's family and your mother's family, if you trace them back far enough, start to overlap. Lines that seem separate on paper merge when you discover that two supposedly different ancestors were actually siblings, or cousins, or otherwise related.
The technical term for this is "pedigree collapse," but a better way to think about it is as the interconnectedness of humanity.
So how many actual, unique ancestors do you really have?
Scientists estimate that going back eleven generations, instead of having 4,094 unique individuals, you probably have somewhere between 500 and 1,000 unique ancestors—maybe fewer if your ancestry is from a relatively isolated community, possibly more if your ancestors came from diverse geographic regions.
That's still a significant number. But it's a fraction of what the simple mathematics suggests.
And here's where it gets even more remarkable.
Because of pedigree collapse, if you're of European descent and you go back far enough—say, to the year 1400—you don't just share a few ancestors with other Europeans. You share most of them. Studies suggest that anyone of European ancestry alive today is descended from nearly every European who was alive in 1400 and left descendants.
Read that again: nearly every European who was alive in 1400 and left descendants is your ancestor.
The same principle applies to other populations. If you're of Asian descent, African descent, or from any other region, the same mathematical reality holds: go back far enough, and you're related to essentially everyone from your ancestral region who lived at that time and has living descendants today.
This means Charlemagne is your ancestor. So is the peasant who worked his fields. The merchant who sold spices in the market. The woman who baked bread in a tiny village whose name has been forgotten. The soldier who fought in a war no one remembers. The midwife who delivered babies in the darkness of medieval winters.
All of them. Every single one who left descendants is your grandfather or grandmother, many times removed.
We are all far more closely related than we realize.
But does this make your ancestry less meaningful? Does it diminish the significance of the people who came before you?
Not at all. In fact, it makes it more profound.
Consider what each of those ancestors endured just to survive long enough to have children.
They lived through plagues that killed one-third of Europe's population. They survived famines when crops failed and entire communities starved. They endured wars—religious wars, territorial wars, wars over succession and power—that swept across continents and destroyed everything in their path.
They survived childbirth in an era when both mothers and infants died with heartbreaking frequency. They survived childhood diseases that killed half of all children before they reached age five. They survived infections from simple cuts that, without antibiotics, could turn deadly within days.
They worked brutal hours in fields, in workshops, in dangerous conditions that would be unthinkable today. They faced cold winters without adequate heating, hot summers without clean water, constant uncertainty about whether there would be enough food to last until spring.
And yet they lived. They survived. They found love, built families, raised children who survived to do the same.
Every single one of them faced a thousand moments where survival was uncertain, where the chain could have broken, where your existence could have been prevented by illness, accident, violence, or simple misfortune.
But they made it through.
Not all their siblings did. Not all their neighbors. Not all their children, in many cases—infant and child mortality was so high that most families lost at least one child, and many lost several.
But the ones who became your ancestors—those specific individuals in that specific lineage—survived. And more than survived: they thrived enough to raise children who thrived enough to raise children of their own.
That survival required not just luck but strength. Resilience. Adaptability. The ability to endure hardship and keep going.
And all of that—all of that survival power, all of that resilience—is encoded in you.
You exist because hundreds of your ancestors refused to give up. Because they kept going when giving up would have been easier. Because they protected their children fiercely. Because they found joy even in hardship, love even in difficulty, hope even when circumstances seemed hopeless.
Geneticists talk about "survival of the fittest," but fitness doesn't mean physical strength alone. It means adaptability. The ability to survive whatever circumstances you're born into. The capacity to endure and persist.
Your ancestors demonstrated that capacity, generation after generation.
So yes, you have fewer unique ancestors than simple mathematics suggests. But each one of those ancestors appears in your family tree multiple times, which means their influence on you—their genetic contribution, their survival traits—is actually stronger, not weaker.
The question then becomes: What do we do with this inheritance?
Every one of us carries the genetic legacy of survivors. We carry the resilience of people who endured plagues, famines, wars, and hardships we can barely imagine. We carry their strength, their adaptability, their refusal to surrender.
But we also carry their capacity for love. For building families and communities. For finding meaning in difficult circumstances. For creating beauty and joy even when life was brutally hard.
That's our inheritance. Not just survival, but the ability to thrive. To build. To love. To persist.
In many cultures around the world, ancestor veneration is a central practice. Not worship, but deep respect and gratitude for those who came before. A recognition that we stand on the shoulders of countless generations, that our existence is a gift purchased at great cost by people whose names we'll never know.
In modern Western culture, we've largely lost that practice. We focus on the individual, on the present moment, on our own achievements. We forget that we're part of an unbroken chain stretching back thousands of years.
But remembering our ancestors—honoring them, feeling gratitude for them—doesn't diminish our individuality. It enhances it. It reminds us that we're part of something larger than ourselves.
Every time you overcome a challenge, you're channeling the resilience of ancestors who overcame far greater challenges with far fewer resources.
Every time you show kindness, you're expressing the capacity for love that allowed your ancestors to build families and communities that endured.
Every time you persist through difficulty, you're demonstrating the same refusal to surrender that kept your ancestral line alive through centuries of hardship.
You are the culmination of countless acts of survival, love, courage, and persistence.
So take a moment today to acknowledge that inheritance.
You don't need to know their names. You don't need to trace your family tree back through centuries. You don't need to visit gravesites or research genealogical records.
Just pause and recognize: you exist because hundreds of people you'll never meet faced impossible odds and survived. Because they loved fiercely enough to protect their children. Because they held onto hope when there was little reason for hope.
Their legacy isn't just genetic. It's also the gift of life itself—the opportunity to experience this world, to build your own meaning, to create your own legacy.
What will you do with that gift?
Will you honor their persistence by persisting through your own challenges? Will you honor their love by loving fiercely? Will you honor their courage by facing your fears?
And perhaps most importantly: What will you pass on to those who come after you?
Because someday, if you choose to have children or influence the next generation in other ways, you'll become an ancestor yourself. Someone in the future—maybe 300 years from now—will exist because you existed. Because you survived. Because you persisted.
What legacy will you leave them?
The answer to that question is being written right now, in how you choose to live today.
Your ancestors gave you the gift of life. What you do with that gift—how you face hardship, how you love others, how you persist through challenges, what meaning you create—that's your gift to the future.
We are all connected—not just to our own direct ancestors, but to the vast web of humanity stretching back through time.
We carry their resilience in our genes and their legacy in our hearts.
Now it's our turn to be worthy of that inheritance.