MY 8-YEAR-OLD SLEPT ALONE EVERY NIGHT— BUT EVERY MORNING SHE SAID HER BED FELT “TOO TIGHT.” AT 2:07 A.M., I CHECKED THE CAMERA… AND COULDN’T STOP CRYING.

My name is Laura Mitchell.

We live in a quiet suburb outside San Jose, California, in a two-story house that feels warm and alive during the day, but grows almost unnervingly silent after dark. At night, the stillness is so complete that even the steady ticking of the clock in the living room seems loud.

My husband and I have one child—our daughter, Emily. She’s eight years old.

From the very beginning, we decided she would be our only child. Not because we lacked love or courage, and certainly not because we were afraid of responsibility. We made that choice because we wanted to give her everything we possibly could—time, attention, stability, opportunity.

The house we live in took more than a decade of careful saving. Its market value is close to $780,000, but to me, it represents discipline, patience, and countless sacrifices. Emily’s education fund was opened before she could even speak in full sentences. By the time she learned to read, I had already mapped out her future schools and quietly dreamed about her college years.

More than anything, though, I wanted to raise her to be independent.

That belief shaped many of our parenting choices, including one that some people questioned.

When Emily was still very young—preschool age—I taught her to sleep in her own room. Not because I wanted distance, but because I believed that confidence grows when children learn to feel safe on their own.

Her bedroom was, without question, the nicest room in the house.

A wide, two-meter bed with a premium mattress that cost nearly two thousand dollars. Shelves packed with picture books, fairy tales, and comics. Stuffed animals placed neatly along the headboard. A small nightlight casting a soft yellow glow across the walls.

Every evening followed the same routine. I’d sit beside her, read a story, kiss her forehead, and switch off the lamp.

Emily never complained. She never cried. She was never afraid to sleep alone.

Until one morning.

That day, I was preparing breakfast when Emily wandered into the kitchen after brushing her teeth. She wrapped her arms around my waist and rested her head against me.

“Mom,” she said quietly, “I didn’t sleep very well.”

I smiled and asked why.

She paused, searching for the right words.

“My bed felt… really cramped.”

I laughed gently. “Cramped? Your bed is huge, sweetheart. Maybe your toys took over?”

She shook her head.

“No. I cleaned it before sleeping.”

I brushed her hair back and dismissed it as a minor complaint. Children say strange things when they’re half asleep.

But the comment didn’t disappear.

Two days later, she said it again.

Then again the next morning.

And the next.

Every day, a variation of the same discomfort.

“I didn’t sleep well.”
“My bed felt smaller.”
“I felt pushed to one side.”

Then one morning, she asked something that made my stomach tighten.

“Mom… did you come into my room last night?”

I crouched down so we were eye level.

“No,” I said gently. “Why would you think that?”

Emily hesitated before answering.

“Because… it felt like someone was lying next to me.”

I laughed, forcing my voice to sound light and unconcerned.

“You were dreaming,” I told her. “Mom slept with Dad all night.”

She nodded, but the look in her eyes stayed with me.

From that moment on, my own sleep was restless.

At first, I told myself it was just nightmares—an overactive imagination. But I knew my daughter. I could see fear where there hadn’t been any before.

That evening, I spoke with my husband, Daniel Mitchell. He’s a surgeon, often exhausted, often coming home late after long shifts. He listened quietly as I explained what Emily had been saying.

That conversation would lead to a decision I never imagined I’d have to make.

The decision to install a camera.