We don’t have to commit everything to memory. But I’ve come to believe we should have a general sense of what things mean, especially when they shape the work we do every day.
I receive the Consumer Compliance Outlook from the Federal Reserve System regularly. For a long time, I never really dove into it. Like many of you, I get so much content, emails, documents, updates and it can feel overwhelming.
But in the past year, something has shifted.
As I’ve grown in my understanding of the business of banking, I’ve become more curious about the broader context of banking, how it’s governed, what frameworks guide our actions, and why those systems exist in the first place. I want to know more about the laws and regulations that drive behavior. Not just what they say, but what they’re designed to do.
Today I paused long enough to ask a question I’ve wondered about for a while:
“What do these cryptic letters and numbers in federal regulations actually mean?”
Think of regulatory citations like a library catalog:
👉 Title is the section of the library (e.g., Science, History, Law)
👉 Part is a specific shelf
👉 Section / Subsection / Paragraph gets you down to the exact book, chapter, even the page
So, when you see something like 12 C.F.R. § 1003.4(a)(10), it’s just a structured way of pointing to:
⏩ The banking regulations (Title 12)
⏩ HMDA rules (Part 1003)
⏩ Required data collection (Section 4)
⏩ Specifically, demographic and income reporting (Paragraph (a)(10))
This verse beautifully echoes what I felt today: that there is wisdom in seeking to understand. Even the smallest act of curiosity, like asking what a citation means can be a step toward deeper discernment, clarity, and purpose in our work.
Where are you being invited to pause and dig deeper, not to memorize, but to gain clarity and context for the systems around you?
Because understanding the why behind the what can transform how we show up in our work and in the world.