# Citing the Unseen

## Threads in the Tapestry

Every thought we share pulls from a quiet web of influences—conversations half-remembered, books read long ago, glances at a stranger's kindness. Citations in writing are like naming those threads: a simple nod to the hands that wove them before ours. On a site like citations.md, this act feels even purer, stripped to Markdown's clean lines, where a bracketed reference grounds wild ideas in reality. It's a reminder that originality isn't invention from nothing, but careful tending of what's come before.

## The Humility of Footnotes

In 2026, as information floods every screen, citations stand as small acts of honesty. They say, "This isn't just mine." Imagine a builder crediting the stone quarried by others, or a cook listing the farm that grew her herbs. Without them, we risk claiming the river as our own, forgetting its source. Markdown makes this effortless—no flashy formats, just plain text linking back. It's philosophy in practice: knowledge grows not alone, but layered, one citation at a time.

## Everyday Attribution

We can live this beyond pages:
- Thank a friend mid-story for the spark they gave.
- Pause in argument to recall where the idea took root.
- Journal the quiet sources of a good day.

In doing so, we weave stronger bonds, turning solitary paths into shared journeys.

*On April 19, 2026, may we cite more, claim less.*