He didn't know if she would reply, but as the final notes of the song faded into the night air, the heavy knot in his chest loosened. Mithat Körler had given him the words he couldn't find himself: the simple, painful honesty of admitting, "I missed you, too." If you’d like, I can:
Mithat Körler's soulful rendition of tells a story of deep, aching nostalgia and the heavy weight of silence between two people who once shared everything. Mithat Korler Ben De Ozledim
He closed his eyes and could almost smell her perfume, a mix of jasmine and the cold sea air. He realized that "missing" wasn't just about sadness; it was about the frustration of having so much left to say and no voice to say it with. Mithat’s voice, steady yet filled with a refined sorrow, seemed to be narrating Selim’s own internal monologue. He didn't know if she would reply, but
The old coastal town of Eskişehir felt different under the amber glow of the streetlamps. For Selim, every corner was a landmine of memories. He sat in a small, dimly lit tea garden, the kind where the steam from the glasses blends with the evening mist. Suddenly, the radio crackled to life, and the familiar, velvety voice of began to sing. "Ben de özledim, ben de..." (I missed you, too...) He realized that "missing" wasn't just about sadness;
As the accordion in the song swelled, Selim looked at his phone. Her name was still there in his contacts, a digital ghost. The song spoke of a pride that keeps people apart—a "stubborn heart" that refuses to bend even when it’s breaking.
of Mithat Körler’s version so you can see how they fit the plot.