Mírame Feliz is a fiery conversation between two ex-lovers. Belinda steps in first, letting the rumor mill spill the tea: her old flame still checks her social media, parties with rebound dates that never stick, and hopes to replace her. She answers with unapologetic confidence—no sequel for this romance, her self-worth ticks louder than his flashy Rolex. Xavi counters, confessing regret from the passenger seat she once owned, promising he is no longer the guy who made her cry, and even flexing a Scarface fantasy where he is Tony Montana and she is Elvira.
The duet swings between “lo siento” (I’m sorry) and “mírame feliz” (look at me happy), showing two sides of post-breakup reality: longing on one hand, radical self-love on the other. Spanish slang, English hooks, and pop-regional vibes paint a picture of modern heartbreak where the real victory is personal growth. By the final chorus the scoreboard is clear—she chooses herself, he faces the cost, and the listener gets a soundtrack for letting go with style.