# Citations

## The Weight of a Name

A citation is more than a reference. It is an act of remembering. When we cite a book, a paper, or a person, we say: this idea did not begin with me. Someone else carried the thought first. By naming them, we place our own work inside a longer conversation that stretches backward through time.

The domain citations.md feels like a quiet room where that conversation can continue. It is a place to keep the sources visible, to honor the chain of hands that passed knowledge from one mind to another. In a world quick to forget origins, a citation is an honest pause.

## A Small Story of Passing Along

Last summer I watched my neighbor, an elderly librarian, sort through boxes of old index cards. Each card held a single quotation and the name of its author. She told me she had kept them for forty years because “ideas need homes, and homes need doorways with names on them.”

She gave me one card before I left. It read: “We do not see things as they are, we see them as we are.” — Anaïs Nin. I still have it. Not because the quote is rare, but because seeing her careful handwriting reminded me that every idea we value was once held by someone who cared enough to write it down and share it.

That is what a citation really is: a small, deliberate kindness. A way of saying the light you are using was first lit by another.

## The Thread Between Us

Every citation is a knot in an invisible net. Pull one thread and you feel the gentle tug of everyone who came before. The practice asks us to stay humble and to stay connected.

*In the end, we are all just footnotes in someone else’s story, hoping to be cited with care.*