One night, with a Little Listener.
A typical bedtime in a household with a 6-year-old. The device doesn't run an app, doesn't push notifications, doesn't ask the child to "interact". It listens, and then it talks once.
Bath, brushed, in bed.
The Little Listener glows softly amber on the bedside table. There's nothing to press. The child knows what it does because it's the third thing on the table, after the book and the water.
"Tell me about your day."
One sentence, spoken aloud from the device. Your child answers — for one minute, three minutes, ten. It listens. It doesn't interrupt. It nods occasionally with a tiny chime.
It weaves a story.
Not about Olu. Not literally. The device picks a theme — friendship after a wobble, what to do with feelings about fractions — and weaves a six-minute story around it. Stars and a fox, maybe. Or a very tall ladder.
It reads itself out, in your voice.
If you've recorded the calibration paragraph, the device reads in a voice indistinguishable from yours — not for impersonation, but because the child asked for it on the nights you're away.
It goes quiet.
The amber dims. No "try again". No "rate this story". No second prompt. The point of the device is that it talks once, and then it stops, and then the child sleeps.
You read tonight's summary, if you want.
In the parent app: "Tonight's story was about friction at school. Your child mentioned Olu, fractions, and feeling embarrassed." A one-paragraph note, then deleted in 7 days unless you save it.