I do Ancestry for me, DH, StepDad, SIL ... and I have never done DNA, never will.
Unsolicited contacts don't always have positive results ...
It's not always a happy ending, and you can not force one.
We have adults who knew they were adopted, and their biological sources. Either-or might be looking for the other but it doesn't mean the one being hunted is interested in contact.
We have adults who find out they were adopted by DNA, potentially causing great permanent damage to them and their family dynamic. It could be all that damage is done for nothing if the biological sources are not interested.
We have adults who gave up children for adoption and with DNA can hunt them down. This perhaps can cause damage to the adopted child/family.
We have fathers who never knew they were not a biological Dad, and a child who didn't know Dad wasn't their biological source. That news could shatter a marriage and family. Maybe two.
I know adopted adults who have zero interest in their biological source, they don't want to be found. Their parents are enough for them.
DNA has now bypassed the privacy of sperm donors, egg donors, embryo donors ... the fallout could have an impact on those processes, and they may become harder to do and much more expensive.
There is no right or wrong opinion on this because it varies with every single person, every single point of view, every single family dynamic .... for some it will have a happy ending, for some it will not.
I understand that it may be a shock or cause issues (especially if there was infidelity involved), but I don't see how that's the child's fault. They did not choose the biological parents they have or how those parents chose to take responsibility or not-- that was thrust upon them and they have been dealing with it for their entire life. It always seems in these situations that people are more upset with the child for reaching out than they are with their family member's involvement and I just find it odd. I can't fathom being angry at anyone who may reach out looking for answers about their family history or connection.
I don't think the child (assuming adult now) has any more rights than any of the biological relatives.
Reminds me of the quote from Harper Lee in To Kill a Mockingbird:
"You can choose your friends but you sho' can't choose your family, an' they're still kin to you no matter whether you acknowledge 'em or not, and it makes you look right silly when you don't"
That is one perspective but having blood relations doesn't mean a positive relationship or any desire to remain in contact. It doesn't mean we want to meet new ones. I am very close to DH extended family. They are my family by choice. While I keep in touch with a few of mine, most I have no relationship with. We grew up apart, raised different, live far away and have nothing in common. I have friends that would be there for me faster than most family, and me the same for them.
The quote, in the context of DNA, also diminishes the the bond and family relationship with adopted children and their parents. They are family!
