# 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, a way of saying this thought, this person, this moment still holds value.

The domain name *citations.md* feels like a modest library kept in plain sight. It suggests care rather than grandeur. Each entry is an acknowledgment that knowledge is never created alone. Every idea stands on the shoulders of others, even if those shoulders are rarely named aloud.

## A Gentle Thread

I like to imagine citations as threads. Some are thick and obvious, connecting major works across centuries. Others are thin and delicate, linking a quiet observation in a personal notebook to a larger conversation. None of them shout. They simply hold things together.

There is humility in this practice. To cite is to admit you did not arrive at this thought by yourself. It is an honest gesture that says I saw something beautiful or true in your work, and I choose to carry it forward rather than claim it as mine.

- A citation remembers
- A citation shares credit
- A citation keeps the conversation alive

## The Quiet Power of Attribution

On a summer evening in 2026, I find myself thinking about how rarely we pause to give credit where it is due. Not for praise or reward, but simply because it is right. The act of citation, at its best, is an exercise in gratitude made visible.

*In the end, we are all citations of someone who came before us.*