The rain drummed against the window of a small, dimly lit tea shop in Yangon, a rhythmic backdrop to the memories that always surfaced when the air turned cool. In the corner, an old cassette player—long since converted to play MP3s from a thumb drive—hissed softly before a familiar acoustic guitar melody filled the room.
It was .
Ko Min Sat paused with his tea cup halfway to his lips. For many, this song was just a classic pop-country ballad from a legendary singer-songwriter. But for him, it was a time machine. The lyrics, written with that signature Po Po (Soe Lwin Lwin) sincerity, spoke of a painful farewell and a self-written letter of sorrow. The rain drummed against the window of a
As the second verse began—Soe Lwin Lwin’s voice reaching that raw, emotional peak—the tea shop owner hummed along.
"Po Po’s voice makes sadness feel like a warm blanket," Su had whispered. "It’s like he knows exactly how it feels when you have to let someone go, even when you aren't ready." Ko Min Sat paused with his tea cup halfway to his lips
Min Sat nodded, a small, bittersweet smile appearing. He pulled out his phone and looked at his own playlist. Among thousands of modern tracks, the "Soe Lwin Lwin Best Hits" folder was the only one that remained untouched by the skip button.
"Classic, isn't it?" the owner asked, wiping the counter. "No matter how many years pass, or whether it’s a cassette or an MP3, this song still hits the same spot." The lyrics, written with that signature Po Po
Min Sat hadn't understood then. He thought they would never have to say goodbye. But life, much like the lyrics of the song, had other plans. Career paths diverged, families moved, and eventually, the letters they wrote to each other became shorter, then stopped altogether. He had eventually "written his own letter of sympathy" to his own heart, just as the song suggested.