# 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 anchor. It holds a thought in place so others can find it later. I have come to see every citation as a thread. Each one connects one mind to another across time and distance. Some threads are centuries old. Others are only days. Together they form a fabric far stronger than any single voice could ever be. ## A Gentle Responsibility To cite well is to practice humility. It admits that our own thinking did not begin with us. It also carries a duty: to represent the original idea fairly. In this way, citation becomes a form of quiet integrity. We are not only borrowing words, we are caring for them. There is something reassuring about this. In an age of noise and speed, the simple discipline of giving credit slows us down. It asks us to pause, to notice whose shoulders we stand on, and to pass the view on honestly. ## Small Lights in a Long Chain Every paper, every essay, every honest conversation stands on citations. They are the lights others left burning so we would not have to walk in complete darkness. We add our own small light and hope it helps the next person find their way. The act feels ordinary until you realize the chain has no end. Each citation is both an acknowledgment of the past and a gesture of goodwill toward the future. *On July 10, 2026, I remain grateful for every name we choose to remember.*