Over the past couple of months, I've been tucking Anaya into bed the same way: a kiss on her forehead, a whispered "Sweet dreams, baby girl", and the quiet hope she’ll drift off quickly. She smiles at me, but I can see it; the heaviness in her eyes, the silence that lingers after the lights go out.
I've tried everything. Extra scoops of ice cream after dinner, silly dad jokes, bedtime hugs that were never part of our old ritual. But there's something always missing, something I know I can never truly replace.
When I finally returned to work, a dear friend helped me adjust our routines; cooking, housekeeping, babysitting. My manager arranged a schedule that let me work from home twice a week. With most things seemingly in place, I handed the AI assistant that Prerna once used over to Anaya a couple of weeks ago. The idea was simple: keep her entertained, help with homework, and satisfy her endless curiosity.
Truth be told, while it was meant to be practical, I feared it might become an unwanted distraction. Or worse, an unworthy substitute for a mother that fate had so cruelly taken away from her.
At first, it seemed harmless. Anaya asked riddles, played her favorite songs, even quizzed it on math problems. But slowly, I noticed she was spending more and more time with it. Not for mischief; she wasn't hiding anything. But there was an intensity in her eyes when she spoke to it. Feelings I couldn't quite place. I began to worry. Was she leaning too much on a machine? Was I letting technology take my place as her parent?
Last night, after tucking her in, I decided to step back into her room and gently tell her to switch it off.
But when I opened the door, I froze.
The AI assistant was speaking. Not in its usual neutral tone, but in a voice I knew better than my own heartbeat. Prerna's voice!
Anaya lay curled under her blanket, eyes closed, listening as the AI assistant narrated a bedtime story. A fairy tale about brave princesses and kind dragons, told in the same gentle rhythm her mother once used.
My chest tightened. In that small glow of technology, Anaya had found a way to bring her mother back.
I didn't stop her. I didn't say a word. I fetched my pillow and blanket, and lay myself down on the couch near her bed.
We now have a new ritual — my hug, her mother's remembered voice, and the quiet comfort of knowing that love doesn't vanish; it adapts, sometimes even through algorithms.
This post is a part of the BlogchatterA2Z Challenge 2026


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