# The Quiet Art of Citation ## What We Carry Forward A citation is more than a footnote. It is an act of remembering. When we write *see also* or *as shown by*, we are admitting that no thought stands alone. Every idea has parents. Every discovery rests on someone else's shoulders. The domain citations.md quietly reminds us of this truth: we are all part of a long conversation that began long before us and will continue long after. In an age that celebrates the new and the original, the simple practice of citation feels almost old-fashioned. Yet it contains a gentle wisdom. It says: *I did not arrive here by myself.* It honors the chain of hands that passed knowledge from one person to the next, sometimes across centuries. ## The Thread Between Minds I once watched my daughter copy a recipe from her grandmother's handwritten card. She did not simply duplicate the instructions. She copied the small notes in the margin, the places where her grandmother had crossed out salt and written "less," the heart doodle next to the chocolate cake. The recipe became more than ingredients. It became a bridge. Citations work the same way. They are the marginal notes of civilization. They tell us who spoke, when they spoke, and that their words still matter enough to be remembered. They turn individual voices into a chorus. - A scientist citing earlier experiments - A poet quoting an ancestor - A student naming the teacher who changed their thinking Each citation is a small bow of gratitude. ## A Place to Pause The file citations.md feels like a quiet room set aside for this purpose. A place where we stop rushing forward and instead look back with respect. It asks us to slow down, to acknowledge our debts, to say the names of those who made our own thinking possible. *In the end, the most honest thing we can write is: I was here because others were here before me.*