# Citations

## The Quiet Power of Being Named

A citation is more than a reference. It is an act of remembering. When we cite a book, a person, or an idea, we say: this mattered enough to keep. In a world that moves quickly and forgets easily, citation becomes a small, stubborn kindness. It pulls something worthy back into the light and gives it another moment of life.

The domain *citations.md* feels like a modest library that never closes. Each file, each entry, is a quiet nod across time. It suggests that truth and beauty are not owned, they are passed along. We do not invent everything ourselves. Most of what we know rests on the shoulders of those who came before us, and the decent thing is to name them.

## A Small Story of Passing It On

Last spring I watched my neighbor, an elderly librarian named Ruth, sort through boxes of old notecards. She had kept them for decades. Each card held a quote, a source, and a few careful words about why it once moved her. She was not organizing them for a book or a project. She simply did not want the thoughts to disappear when she did.

She handed me one card before I left. It was a line from a poet I had never read. “You might like this,” she said. That evening I looked up the full poem, then the poet’s name, then another book that had cited her. One small citation had opened a door I did not know existed. Ruth was not trying to be remembered. She was simply keeping the chain alive.

## What We Choose to Carry

We decide every day what deserves to be cited, what deserves to be carried forward. The act itself is gentle and deliberate. It says the world is not only what we make, it is also what we choose to honor.

*In the end, we are all footnotes in someone else’s better story.*