# Citations

## The Weight of a Name

A citation is more than a reference. It is a quiet act of respect. When we cite someone, we say their words or ideas mattered enough to remember. In a world that moves quickly and forgets easily, a citation becomes a small, deliberate pause. It carries the name of another person across time so their thought can live a little longer.

## What We Choose to Carry

Every time we write a citation, we make a choice. We decide whose voice deserves to echo. Some names appear again and again because their insight proved sturdy. Others surface only once, yet that single mention can still feel like an act of gratitude. The citation list at the end of an essay is never neutral. It is a record of what the writer chose to stand beside.

I have come to see citations as gentle threads. Each one tethers a new idea to older ones, creating a fabric that stretches backward through years and minds. The domain name *citations.md* reminds me that documentation itself can be an expression of humility. It says: this work did not begin with me, and it will not end with me.

## A Quiet Practice

There is something calming about keeping a clean list of citations. It asks us to be accurate, to give credit where it is due, and to stay honest about our sources. In that sense, the simple markdown file becomes a small moral document, a place where we practice intellectual decency one line at a time.

*On a warm July evening in 2026, the act of citing still feels like saying thank you.*