Kyal Sin always let her clothes do the talking - at one Myanmar anti-coup rally, she taped a sign onto the back of her black jacket: "We need democracy. Justice for Myanmar. Respect our votes."
Weeks later, when the 19-year-old was gunned down Wednesday at a protest on the streets of Myanmar's second largest city Mandalay, her t-shirt read: "Everything will be ok."
The slogan has become a poignant refrain echoing across social media, and thousands turned out for her funeral in Mandalay on Thursday.
For Kyal Sin, nicknamed "Angel," restoring her country's fragile democracy trumped concerns about her own safety as she protested for an end to military rule.
The young dance enthusiast joined hundreds of thousands across the country calling for the release of civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been in detention since the military took over on 1 February.
Before going to a demonstration this week, she listed her blood type on her Facebook page, her phone number, and said her organs were available for donation if anything were to happen to her.
"I could donate (my organs) if I died. If someone needs urgent help, I can donate even if it causes my death," she wrote.
She was one of at least 38 people the United Nations (UN) said were killed on Wednesday, Myanmar's deadliest day since the coup.
Footage posted on social media shows Kyal Sin's final moments during a demonstration that turned violent - crawling along the road and running for cover amid the sounds of gunfire and a plume of tear gas.
A doctor confirmed to reporters that she had been shot in the head.
'One Vote From The Heart'
In the hours following news of Kyal Sin's death, tributes flooded online, with artwork created of her striking a crouching pose on the day of her death.
On her Facebook page, she showed a different side - posting videos of her dance moves, selfies of her outfits, and showcasing her close relationship with her father.
In a tender moment last month, he tied a red ribbon symbolising bravery around her wrist, according to photos she posted.
"I don't want to post too much about this - just thank you, daddy," Kyal Sin wrote, along with the hashtag "Justice for Myanmar".
Late last year, father and daughter took photographs of their purple ink-stained fingers after casting their votes in Myanmar's second democratic election, which Suu Kyi's party went on to win in a landslide.
"For the first time in my life, I have undertaken my responsibility as a citizen... one vote from the heart," Kyal Sin wrote on Facebook, posting a picture of her kissing her inked finger.
On Thursday morning, mourners sang popular revolutionary song "We Won't Forget Until the End of the World" as they filed past her coffin carrying bouquets and floral wreaths.
Leading the funeral procession to the cemetery was a truck covered in flowers with a "hero" poster on the front followed by an elaborate black and gold hearse.
A friend from her high school days, Linlae Waddy, 19, said Kyal Sin loved to sing and dance and was also a taekwondo trainer.
"Losing such a friend like her is not good for our (friendship group) as well as for the country, that is why we are very sad," Linlae told the media.
"She was very angry about what is happening around the country, that is why she always said she needed to protest. She constantly protested since the beginning. I wasn't even that active like her."
The outpouring of grief extended online with many calling her a martyr.
"My heart feels so much hurt," one of her friends posted on Facebook.
"Rest in peace my friend," another male friend wrote. "We will fight this revolution until the end." - AFP