A prevailing view in the western world is to see ancestors as only related to us by blood, and sometimes by lineage. I think this worldview can create challenges for those embarking on ancestor work in alternative spirituality communities and creates unnecessary barriers of connection. Over the past few years, ancestor work has been such an important part of my life. As I dove into writing my book Ancestral Whispers: A Guide to Developing Ancestral Veneration Practices, I started noticing how limiting the current conception of the definition of ancestor is when compared with other cultures. Even in older versions of our own cultures, the conception of the family and community was more expansive. In this article, I would like to challenge readers to explore the identity of ancestor not solely through the biological relationship of kin, but as potentially a much broader continuum of relationships that somehow has contributed to you are. Continuum of Ancestry In Ancestral Whispers, I list various categories of ancestral types to consider. Blood relatives are those from we are biologically descended. Affinity ancestors are those individuals to whom we are connected through our identity or affiliations. Conceptual ancestors become more difficult to define, but expands the definition of ancestor to include the non-human. I also would challenge us to consider those non-human ancestors in terms of mythology and story. In this way, the continuum of ancestor spans the binaries of human to non-human, blood to non-blood, and "real" to fictional. All aspects of my personality and experience are interrelated with others, many of them not related by blood. As a queer person I am connected through shared experience to a myriad of community members, many of them who fought for the rights I live with now. Our queer ancestors form a collective related to our shared attributes and through that we share a connection. As a therapist, I learned and honed my skills through learning from those who came before me, and when I engage in the professional act I am related to those teachers. As a Welsh person, I share a cultural and social bond with others from that country, and our shared relationship to the country makes it ancestral to us all. These relationships might on the outset not seem ancestral but look closer and the way we relate to the stories of these affinity and conceptual ancestors do contribute to who we are. I started researching other cultures and noticed that so many of them around the world have such a variety of concepts of what defines family and community. The ties that bind in most cultures are not just the biological, and indeed in many languages it is a widespread honorific to call a neighour "aunty" or "uncle." This highlights for me how much our conceptions of the spiritual and relationships to the spiritual are based on underlying worldview. This realization opened up for me a whole new world of potential. A Robust Ancestor Veneration Practice These relationships bear similarities to the biological ancestors I look up to in whose stories I have been taught and where I find parts of myself. As soon as I began to see this dynamic, ancestor work ceased being entirely about a narrowly defined set of others and it became about myself. I found the connector of my story in ancestral work, and that insight opened this work to include a robust pantheon of ancestral figures. As I looked deeper, I started to form nuanced approaches to each category of ancestral figure. The way I honour a fictional character is very different from how I honour the personification of the land of Wales, or one of my affinity ancestors of my queer identity, to how I respect and honour my grandparents. I also began to understand how much crossover ancestor work can have with spirit work and deity work. I tend to work with folkloric figures like folk-heroes as affinity ancestors, and in this way, this has direct crossover with other forms of spiritual work. I think one of the major issues westerners have with ancestor work is not really knowing how to work with ancestors. With spirits and gods, we have religious traditions on which to fall back to inform us on what to do, but with our ancestors we often don't know how to start outside of the mourning traditions of the culture. Western culture has an uncomfortable relationship to death, and so we have an uncomfortable relationship with ancestors. Yet, when we bring it down to relationship and we challenge the limited concept of what an ancestor can only be to what it could include, that shift in worldview can bring with it inspiration on what relationship can be. Exercise to Expand Your Definition of Ancestor
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Ben Stimpson (He/They/Them) is a therapist, lecturer, student, and spiritual director. Ben has developed courses on a variety of topics, including ancestor veneration, the power of story, and folklore. When not working with ...