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The Moon had a problem.
He could not remember his favourite lullaby.
He had searched the whole sky. He asked the stars — but they only twinkled. He asked the wind — but she only sighed. He asked the clouds — but they had already fallen asleep.
“I have heard it before,” said the Moon, troubled. “A small sound. Soft. It put the whole world to sleep.”
He looked down at the earth, searching. Village after village. Rooftop after rooftop.
And then he saw you.
Eyes growing heavy. Breath slowing down. The sound of your breathing — in, and out, and in — rising up through the dark like a tiny, perfect song.
That was it.
That was the lullaby he had been looking for.
The Moon smiled his wide, slow smile.
“There it is,” he said. “There it is.”
And he kept watch above your window — as he always does, as he always will — while the whole world rested.
You were the lullaby. You always were.
💡 The Lesson Inside
The Moon did not need a song from the stars or the wind. The thing that put the whole world to sleep was already there — the small, steady breath of a child settling into rest. We spend so much of life searching for something extraordinary, when the most powerful thing in any room is often the quietest. You do not have to do anything remarkable to matter. Simply being here, breathing, resting — that is enough. That has always been enough.
✨ Words Worth Keeping
Troubled
feeling worried or unsettled, the way you feel when something important is just out of reach.
Sighed
to breathe out slowly and deeply — the sound of tiredness, longing, or quiet relief.
Rooftop
the flat or sloped top of a building. In Indian towns and villages, rooftops are where families sleep in summer, dry grain in winter, and watch the sky at night.
Lullaby
a gentle, slow song sung to help a child fall asleep. Every culture in the world has its own lullabies — they may be the oldest songs human beings have ever made.
Rested
to have slept or relaxed fully — not just lying down, but truly at peace.
📚 Quick Glossary
Lori
the Hindi word for a lullaby, sung by mothers and grandmothers across India for thousands of years. The most beloved begins "Aaja re nindiya" — "Come to me, sleep."
Keeps watch
to stay awake and alert while others sleep, to guard through the night. In Indian tradition, God is often described as the one who never sleeps so that you can.
The Moon (Chandra)
in Indian mythology, Chandra is the Moon god — calm, cool, and gentle. Across all ten stories in this series, the Moon is the same character: wise, warm, and always present.
Second-person narration
when a story says "you" instead of "he" or "she," speaking directly to the reader. This story uses it so the child becomes the character — the story ends inside them.
Twinkled
the way starlight flickers and shimmers — a quick, dancing light. Stars twinkle because their light passes through moving layers of air before reaching our eyes.