...and I think that is the crunch. People do research and follow it through to recent (living) people for all sorts of reasons really. Some do it because they can, as the information can be accessible to them and they take great pleasure in trying to make contact with living descendants (nothing wrong with that!). Others do it because they have personal reasons for "needing to know".
Others stop short really of researching to current/living descendants (that is me
).
I think moving on to living descendants' research is a very personal thing and down to each of us researching how we want to do it really
The main thing though, and the major "health warning" is sometimes we can find information out about living people that we cannot ever discuss with them due to how sensitive the information can be... All fine and good researching events and activities when people are 'well dead', however, not so easy to be so casual about things when people are still living really...
Monica
Very true, we met our half-sisters last week - we'd always been vaguely aware of them but would have had no way of getting in touch with them without having access to birth/marriage certificates and the electoral register. As it turned out they were as curious about us as we were about them, and possibly the only living people who remember my dad well - and were able to fill in some of each other's blanks.
On the other hand, my mum is a very proud woman and tells a story of how her dad's mum died young and his father couldn't cope so had him adopted, and how his father was a wealthy man who lived in a huge mansion but my grandad was cheated out of his fortune by rogue lawyers!
The truth rather more looks like his dad knocked up his servant and though he was a pit manager so probably had a nice house, it had something like 6 windows so hardly a mansion! And his dad's dad also appeared to have a thing about servants and ended up in an asylum!
I thought my dad's parents had a bit of a shotgun wedding as their first was born 3 months after they were married, but my mum's parents were married 9 days before their first child was born!
There are times when she's slagging off my dad's side that we feel like enlightening her, but in reality we never would - I don't respect the man any less for having "illigitimate" on his birth certificate or having pre-marital sex (tsk tsk

but my mum's generation take that kind of thing more seriously so could never tell her!
Personally, there is lots of public information people can read about me - whether I pay my bills on time, where I live, etc etc, I've no concerns about anyone looking at my birth certificate whether it's in the comfort of their own home or at Scotland's people.