People eventually develop sleeping patterns as their sleep experiences regularly change through time.
“Kén” tells us about a sleep that has been a part of its owner since she was born. As a means of describing the variations in slumbers in her life and the inheritance of each class from the past to the present, there will be cocoons inside one another in the box.
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hSCD_B--vt0NlzzklET35rr5nz6BtQI3/view?usp=drivesdk](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hSCD_B--vt0NlzzklET35rr5nz6BtQI3/view?usp=drivesdk)

She is now living in a small apartment in Saigon. She shares a foldable mattress full of pillows with her elder sister, a dog, and a cat. Despite its size, the room gives her an ideal sleeping environment. She enjoys lying down in a tiny space with warm yellow lights, and more lately, she loves to have some scented candles to give it a pleasant smell.
And, as is her own habit, she takes two pillows and positions them on either side of her body, giving her the impression of being sandwiched between them.
She claimed, it is how she sleeps safely and peacefully.



When I asked her about the origin of it, she said her grandmother used to let her sleep in that posture inside a cradle since she was just a newborn. Yet, her petite frame didn't appear to fit the family crib, which had passed down through the generations, so her grandma added two pillows to the sides to help her not slide out of it.
And until now, she still vividly remembers that woven bamboo cradle hanging from the ceiling.
As she grew up a little more, her sleep changed to another cocoon. At this time, she slept in a hammock with pillows stuffed inside to keep her from turning too much and tumbling to the ground.
