My Son Said Someone Was Watching Him Sleep—So I Set Up a Hidden Camera, and the 3 A.M. Video Exposed a Face I Never Expected
Fear usually feels like a childhood phase—bad dreams, creaky floors, and shadows that look bigger than they are. At 34, I thought I understood what was real and what was simply an overactive imagination. I’m a single mom, and I’ve learned to balance empathy with common sense because that’s what parenting requires when you’re doing most of it alone.
My eight-year-old, Sam, has always been creative. He can turn a blanket into a fortress and a cardboard box into a rocket ship. So when he first told me there was “someone” in his room at night, I assumed it was the usual: nightmares, anxiety, or a scary story that stuck too long.
I tried the normal fixes. A brighter night light. A calm bedtime routine. Reassurance. The kind of comfort you give your child when you’re certain the problem will pass.
It didn’t pass.