# Citations ## A Quiet Anchor The word *citation* carries a steady weight. It is not loud or flashy. It simply says: this idea did not appear from nowhere. Someone else thought it first, or felt it, or proved it. By naming them we admit we stand on other shoulders. In a world that rewards originality above all else, a citation is an act of honesty and gratitude. ## The Thread Between Minds Every citation is a small bridge. It reaches backward to a researcher in 1953, a poet in 1789, or a grandmother who told a story that never made it into print. These bridges keep human knowledge from drifting into isolated islands. They remind us that thinking is a collective project, passed hand to hand across time. When we add a citation we perform a modest ritual. We pause our own voice long enough to say, “I saw this too.” That pause creates space for truth to grow larger than any single person. ## The Light We Borrow There is humility in citation. It admits our ideas are rarely pure invention. They are borrowed light, reflected and focused through countless other minds before they reach us. The more carefully we cite, the brighter and more trustworthy that light becomes. *On this midsummer day in 2026, may we cite with care and read with thanks.*