It felt like it happened just yesterday. Gu Weijing still clearly remembers the time and place this photo was taken.
It was when he was in the eleventh grade,
he and Mona went to Yangon's Moma Sea Amusement Park during summer vacation.
There, they had Myanmar's largest Ferris wheel, with an automatic photo feature that provided visitors in the cabin with a group photo when the Ferris wheel descended.
The photos were free, taken automatically when the cabin reached a fixed point, but it cost money to take them home.
Printing a photo cost 30,000 Myanmar Kyat, and the electronic copy was the same price, with an additional 15,000 Kyat for a frame.
Mona asked if they should get a photo.
Gu Weijing thought it was a bit expensive, as 30,000 Kyat could print half a dozen photos in a photo studio, and Mona just smiled.
A few days later, Miss Sande Nu suddenly took his phone and fiddled with it, and this photo became Gu Weijing's screensaver, which he has used to this day.
