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Ozan Dundar Koyum Sana Gelecegim
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Sana Gelecegim — Ozan Dundar Koyum

He remembered the day he left thirty years ago. He had promised his mother he would return once he "made something of himself." He chased success in the city’s iron grip, building a life of schedules and sirens. But every night, his heart migrated back to the dusty paths of his village, to the cold spring water that numbed his teeth, and to the old walnut tree where he carved his name. "Enough," he whispered.

As the sun began to set, painting the Anatolian hills in shades of bruised purple and gold, he reached the crest of the final hill. There it was. The village lay in the valley like a tired traveler at rest. The minaret peeked through the trees, and the smoke from the chimneys signaled that dinner was being prepared. Ozan Dundar Koyum Sana Gelecegim

"Emin?" the old man croaked, a slow smile breaking across a face lined like a map of the earth. "You took the long way home, son." He remembered the day he left thirty years ago

Emin felt a tear escape. He wasn't a businessman, a success, or a failure anymore. He was simply home. He looked at the winding path ahead and echoed the song's promise: I told you I would come back. "Enough," he whispered