He remembered the first time he heard it. It was three years ago, during a humid summer night in Bodrum. He had been sitting on a pier with Leyla, the scent of salt and jasmine heavy in the air. Someone in the distance had a radio playing, and Reynmen’s voice—smooth and heavy with longing—drifted over the water. "Seninle olmak var ya, şu dünyayı paylaşmak var ya..."
For Kerem, this wasn't just a song; it was the soundtrack to a memory he couldn't quite let go of. reynmen_seninle_olmak_var_ya
In that moment, the lyrics hit differently. It wasn't just about the desire to be together; it was about the realization that some people are woven into your soul so tightly that even distance is just a temporary silence. He remembered the first time he heard it
Leyla had hummed along, her eyes reflecting the moonlight. "It sounds like a promise," she had whispered. "The kind you keep even when things get loud." Someone in the distance had a radio playing,
But life had gotten very loud. Career moves, family pressures, and the simple, eroding friction of time had pulled them into different orbits. Kerem moved to the bustle of the city; Leyla stayed by the sea. They hadn't spoken in months, yet every time the song shuffled into his playlist, he was back on that pier, feeling the warmth of her hand against his.
The neon lights of Istanbul’s Kadıköy district blurred into streaks of amber and violet as Kerem leaned against the ferry railing. In his ears, the acoustic guitar intro of Reynmen’s began to play, the rhythm syncing perfectly with the rhythmic thrum of the boat’s engine.