>>4779227Hmmm, yes, genetics is an interesting field of study and I'd love to know more about it. My own genetics are exclusively western European (mostly German, a little Scandi) and Irish. Nothing else. But I have a trait I don't see often--very, very white skin which doesn't wrinkle or age hardly at all as long as you stay out of the sun. My grandma called it alabaster skin. The actress Isabelle Adjani had it, for one example. Thought it was a Celtic/British thing but when I spent time in Ireland and the UK I realized it's not really, because most people there don't have it, they're more just standard fair with ruddiness. Even the redheads are more peachy than pure white and have dryer skin which doesn't age as well.
I've seen skin like mine now and then elsewhere in Europe and the north countries. But it's never common. Doesn't run in my family or anybody's from what I can tell. Just turns up now and then.
Romanians interest me because I can always spot them. They seem to have very strong native traits, so that even when interbred with other races theirs come out stronger.
Question, are all Romanians part gypsy or not? I get the sense that a lot of people think Romanian and gypsy are one and the same, but I don't believe that's correct. Are true Romanians slavs or what? Or a mixture of other Euros and gypsies? Thanks, I'm genuinely curious. That woman I dated acknowledged being part gypsy, and she had every stereotypical negative gypsy trait you can think of, and it was bizarre as fuck because she had no gypsy influences in her (American) upbringing.
Took me a while to acknowledge what a thieving, scamming, self-centered user she was because here, we don't see gypsies hardly ever and so when she told me about herself, it didn't make me run like it should have. The traits were literally in her blood though. She wasn't even self-aware about them, not at all. She believed she was super nice. Really makes you think...