Balivernes is a fantastic French word for "nonsense," "rubbish," or "idle talk." It's a bit old-fashioned and literary, which makes it a unique and fun word to add to your vocabulary.
In the song, Gims sings, "je subis tes balivernes" (I endure your nonsense), expressing his frustration and exhaustion with the trivial and meaningless things in the relationship. It's a powerful and elegant way to describe feeling fed up.
Ever wondered what happens when the fairy-tale glow of a relationship flickers and you suddenly can’t tell if the magic is real or just smoke? “Est-ce Que Tu M’aimes?” plunges us into that dizzy moment. Gims starts with the hope of seeing light at the end of the tunnel, celebrates an effortless connection where even a raised eyelash was a secret code, then watches the sky crack open with doubts. The repeated question “Do you love me?” becomes an intense echo chamber where each answer is a shaky “I don’t know.”
Throughout the song, vivid images swirl: inky tattoos on eyelids to keep a lover’s face forever in sight, a wedding ring that feels more like handcuffs, and a painful collision with a “glass ceiling” of expectations. Gims paints love as a thrilling game of hunter and prey, but also a storm that leaves both players soaked and shivering. It is a confession of vulnerability, a tug-of-war between commitment and freedom, and a reminder that sometimes the hardest person to understand in a relationship is yourself.