Nice, I'm really pleased you've covered this area. I also think you hit the main point right at the end, that many psychotherapists already incorporate this sort of ancestor stuff, because they often begin to notice patterns which point to this stuff as being important in helping their clients... amongst other odd things.Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger book The Ancestor Syndrome was my first introduction to it about 10 years ago - whilst a mate was exploring very old family photos of great great grand parents etc in his therapy sessions, and what a lot of information they contained!Now that epigenetic inheritance is hot, we can see this approach by therapists was absolutely right. Their gut feelings we're right all along, and many issues we suffer with, may not be ours at all. And it's lovely to hand them back to where - we believe - they belong.That said, there's all sorts of ways to do this sort of stuff, and most seem to come down to two people in a room, and the relationship that exists between them.Of everything I have come across, psychotherapy is the one thing I have some real hope in, that it has within it the potential to change the world in the fullness of time.I've got a few reservations about all the after death stuff brought up here etc, and some of the epigenetic stuff wasn't quite fleshed out properly, but other than that, it was a sensible exploration of some of these ancestor/inheritance issues.