Arrepentí is the past tense of the powerful verb arrepentirse, which means "to regret" or "to repent". It's a word packed with emotion, used when someone feels deep remorse for a mistake they've made.
In the song, the singer looks back on the relationship and confesses his sorrow, singing, "Si fallé me arrepentí" (If I failed, I regretted it). This one word perfectly captures the song's heartbreaking theme of longing and wishing you could undo the past.
“Cien” is a heartfelt pop ballad in which CNCO lays bare the sting of watching someone you adore move on with another partner. The title comes from the line “Duele cien veces más”-it hurts a hundred times more-capturing the magnified pain the singer feels every time he scrolls past her picture. He wrestles with disbelief (“no me creo que en otro lugar eres más feliz”), jealousy, and regret, insisting that nobody will ever love her the way he does.
Despite moments of self-doubt-“¿En qué punto fue que te perdí?”-the narrator ultimately stands firm in his conviction that their connection was unparalleled. He admits mistakes, even picturing himself on his knees asking forgiveness, yet the core message stays clear: his love is unique and irreplaceable. “Cien” is therefore a bittersweet mix of longing, pride, and vulnerability that invites listeners to reflect on how hard it is to let go when you truly believe a relationship was one-of-a-kind.