Our family lives in a quiet, two-story house in a residential neighborhood south of Mexico City.
During the day, the place is bright and full of life.
But at night… the silence is so profound that you can almost hear the clock ticking from the living room.
Family games
My husband and I have only one daughter: Sofia, who is eight years old.
From the beginning, we decided that she would be our only child.
Not out of selfishness.
Not out of fear of difficulties.
But because we wanted to give her everything within our means.
The house—which we bought after more than ten years of saving—was one of the biggest investments of our lives. We opened a college fund for Sofia when she was still a baby. In my mind, I was already planning her university education even before she learned to read properly.
But, above all, I wanted her to learn to be independent.

A girl who learned to sleep alone
Since Sofia was in preschool, I accustomed her to sleeping in her own room.
Not because he didn’t love her.
On the contrary: he loved her enough to understand this—a child doesn’t grow strong if he always sleeps clinging to his parents.
Sofia’s room was the tidiest and prettiest in the house.
— A spacious bed with a good quality mattress bought from a department store
— Shelves full of children’s books, comics, and Mexican legends
— Stuffed animals neatly arranged
— A night light with a soft yellow glow
Every night I would read her a story, give her a kiss on the forehead, and turn off the light.
Sofia was never afraid to sleep alone.
Until… one morning.
“Mom, the bed feels very cramped…”
That morning, while I was preparing breakfast, Sofia had just finished brushing her teeth. She came over, hugged my waist, and spoke in a low, sleepy voice:
—Mom… I didn’t sleep well last night.
I smiled and knelt down in front of her.
—Why, sweetie?
She frowned, thought for a moment, and replied:
—It’s just… the bed felt very cramped.
I laughed softly.
—But your bed is big, and you sleep alone. How could it be cramped? Did you leave any toys in there?
She shook her head.
—No, Mom. It was tidy.
I stroked her hair, thinking it was just a childish complaint.
But I was wrong.
The words that were repeated and sowed fear
Two days passed.
Then three.
Then a whole week.
Every morning, Sofia said the same thing:
—Mom, I can’t sleep well.
—I feel like the bed is smaller.
—Like something is pushing me towards the edge.
One morning she asked a question that made my heart stop:
—Mom… did you come into my room last night?
I knelt down and looked her in the eyes.
—No. Why?
She hesitated for a moment before answering:
—Because… I felt like someone was sleeping with me.
I forced a laugh and kept my voice calm.
—It must have been a dream. Mom slept with Dad all night.
But from that day on…
I never slept peacefully again either. The decision to install a camera
At first, I thought Sofia was having nightmares.
But as a mother, I saw the real fear in her eyes.
I talked to my husband, Luis, a doctor who works at a public hospital and almost always comes home in the early hours of the morning because of his long shifts.
After listening to me, he just smiled slightly.
“Children have vivid imaginations. Our house is safe… nothing is wrong.”
I didn’t argue.
Instead, I installed a camera.
A small, almost invisible security camera, in a corner of the ceiling in Sofia’s room.
Not to spy on her… but to reassure myself.
That night, Sofia slept soundly.
The bed was tidy.
There was no mess.
Nothing was out of place.
I sighed with relief.
Until two in the morning.
2:00 a.m. — The moment I will never forget
I woke up thirsty.
As I passed through the living room, I instinctively opened my phone and checked the live camera feed… just to make sure everything was okay.
And then…
My whole body froze.
On the screen, the door to Sofia’s room slowly opened.
Someone entered.
A thin body.
White, almost gray hair.
Slow, trembling steps.
I covered my mouth when I finally understood:
It was Doña Carmen.
Luis’s mother.
She walked straight to Sofia’s bed.
She carefully lifted the blanket.
And then…
she lay down next to her granddaughter.
As if it were her own bed.
Sofia stirred a little, pushed towards the edge of the mattress. She frowned, but didn’t wake up.
And I…
I cried silently.
A mother who gave her whole life
Doña Carmen is seventy-eight years old.
She was widowed when Luis was only seven.
She never remarried in more than forty years.
She worked at everything:
— Cleaning houses
— Washing other people’s clothes
— Selling atole and tamales in the early morning
All to raise her son and help him become a doctor.
Luis once told me that when he was a child, there were days when his mother only ate bread… but she always served him meat or fish.
When Luis was in college, she still sent him envelopes with a little money, carefully folded.
For her…
there was almost nothing left.
The silent pain of old age
In recent years, we noticed changes in Doña Carmen.
— Once she got lost and cried at a bus stop until nightfall.
— Another time, while eating, she looked up and asked:
—Who are you?
— Sometimes she called me by the name of a woman who had died decades ago.
We took her to the doctor.
In a soft voice, he told us:
—Early stage Alzheimer’s. But we never imagined she would walk around the house at night.
And even less that…
She would sleep in her granddaughter’s bed.
When the adults finally woke up
The next day, I showed the video to Luis.
He was silent for a long time.
And then…
He broke down.
“Maybe she remembers when I was a child…”
He squeezed my hand tightly.
“It’s my fault. I got lost in my work… and I didn’t realize that my mother was losing herself.”
Since then, Sofia sleeps with us.
And as for Doña Carmen…
We don’t blame her.
We love her even more.
The decision that changed everything
We decided:
— To carefully close Sofia’s bedroom door at night
— To install motion sensors in the house
— And most importantly: not to let Doña Carmen sleep alone
We moved her to a room closer to ours.
Every night, I sit by her side.
I talk to her.
I listen to her memories.
I help her feel safe.
Because sometimes, elderly people don’t need medicine.
They just need to feel that they still have a family to come home to.
Family games
THE END
My daughter’s bed was never too small.
The truth is…
An old woman—alone, lost in her memories—
was simply looking for the warmth of a child
whom she loved and cared for…
her entire life.
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