Through the years, a number of expletive-laden comments have
been made about statistics. After all, not many people have fond memories of
their college statistics classes. I can hardly blame them.
Today, though, I am not ashamed to stand and confess, “Statistics
is my friend.” Why? In times when a researcher gets so mired in the details as
to lose sight of the goal, impartial numbers can serve as encouragement. After
all, a number doesn’t bend to make me happy, or tell me lies (contrary to a certain
popular quote). A number is a number is a number. And right now, I need some
numbers to help me see that I am, indeed, making progress.
It’s the task I’m bogging down in that’s gotten to me:
trying to sort through the generations of all the descendants of my Taliaferro
line. I’ve gone back to the beginning of the 1700s to start with Richard
Taliaferro. From there, I’m wending my way through the descendant lines of each
of Richard and Rose Berryman Taliaferro’s thirteen—at least—children.
Last time I talked about this, I had been working on the
lines of their son, Dr. John Taliaferro. That was nine days ago.
I’m still working on that same line. Did I make any progress
at all?
It doesn’t feel
like it.
That, you see, is why I need to employ some numbers. Think
of this as my Cheering-Up Party. Statistics are for celebrating.
Turns out, all that hard work did get me somewhere. Last time I looked, I had less than fourteen
hundred people in my family tree database. I am now up to almost nineteen
hundred. Over five hundred entries in nine days isn’t bad. No wonder it felt so
tedious!
Meanwhile, over at Family Tree DNA, where my
autosomal DNA “Family Finder” test results await my return, the match tally is racing me. Last
time I looked, I had seven hundred fifty matches. Now, there are seven hundred
sixty seven.
Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to add any more of those
matches to my confirmed relationships count. There is so much yet to learn
about those ancestors seven generations back—and beyond.
When you find yourself doing a lot of work, yet having
precious little to show for the effort, it is statistics that can shine the
light on your progress. Yes, I’ve been swamped under the data dump from endless
pages of old genealogies. But sometimes, it helps to stop what you are doing
and come up for air. Keeping a count of the mile markers passed, the surnames
aggregated, the records collected helps.
Yes you should stop and take stock of the whole situation from time to time:)
ReplyDeleteI was surprised to see how encouraging it was. I usually shy away from numbers, thinking they will somehow beat me up. But when in a project that seems to not have budged, no matter how much work has been exerted, those numbers sure helped.
DeleteHoly cows! Over five hundred entries in nine days?!?!!!!
ReplyDeleteYour family has grown in leaps and bounds! (Not really, but the ones you know something about has!)
It sure was a boost to discover that count. And here I was, thinking I hadn't gotten anything accomplished...
Delete