It started as a quiet, ordinary night, until I noticed my son sitting upright in bed, softly whispering into the darkness. At first, my heart raced, but as I stepped closer, I saw he wasn’t afraid—just focused. When I asked who he was talking to, he calmly pointed to the rocking chair in the corner and said, “The big man sits there. He sings.” The room was empty, yet the chair moved slightly, as if it had just been touched.
The next morning, I gently asked him to describe the “big man.” He said he was kind, older, and wore a hat like the ones in Grandpa’s old pictures. His words stopped me. My father had passed away before my son was born, and I had never shown him those photos. Still, something about the description felt too familiar to ignore.
Later, I placed a family album in front of him without saying a word. He flipped through a few pages, then suddenly pointed with certainty. “That’s him, Mommy.” It was my father, smiling in a wide-brimmed hat. My son didn’t seem scared—he looked comforted, as if the presence he described brought him peace rather than fear.
That night, as I tucked him into bed, I felt calm instead of unsettled. Whether it was imagination or something I couldn’t explain, it gave him a sense of safety. I kissed his forehead and whispered that if someone was watching over him, then we were lucky. For the first time in days, he slept peacefully—and the chair stayed still.