# Citations

## The Weight of a Name

A citation is more than a footnote. It is a quiet act of respect, an acknowledgment that our ideas rarely stand alone. Every time we write a name or a date in parentheses, we say: someone was here before me. Someone thought, struggled, and left a trace. The domain *citations.md* feels like a gentle reminder of that chain.

We live inside an invisible library. Every opinion we hold, every joke we tell, every way we comfort a friend has been shaped by voices we can no longer name. A citation is our small bow toward those unseen hands.

## The Thread Between Us

I keep thinking about my grandmother’s recipe cards. She never wrote “inspired by” or gave credit at the bottom. Yet when she made her lemon cake, she was citing her own mother without ever using the word. The cake carried the memory forward.

In the same way, the most honest parts of our lives are stitched together from other lives. A phrase we learned from a teacher. A gesture we copied from someone we loved. A way of being silent that we picked up from a stranger on a train. These are our private citations, the ones we never publish.

## A Simple Practice

Perhaps the kindest thing we can do is to notice when we are borrowing light. Not out of fear of plagiarism, but out of gratitude. To pause and say: this idea did not begin with me. That pause keeps us humble and connected.

- A cited idea grows stronger, never weaker.
- A remembered kindness travels further.
- A named source becomes a bridge instead of a wall.

*On this quiet July evening in 2026, I am glad to be part of the long conversation.*