La Frousse is Louise Attaque’s playful confession of everyday anxieties. The singer rattles off a kaleidoscope of worries—being a second late, saying the wrong word, giving a kiss, losing memories, or simply stepping outside when it rains. Each line chases a desire to move farther, speak louder, or search deeper, only to bump into that jittery feeling we all know as la frousse (the heebie-jeebies). By piling up tiny fears beside big existential ones, the lyrics paint a vivid portrait of how doubt can shadow even our most ordinary moments.
Yet the song is far from gloomy. Its upbeat violin-driven groove turns the litany of “what-ifs” into a shared laugh at our own nervousness. Louise Attaque reminds us that everyone feels the same tremors, and simply admitting it can be liberating. In the end, “La Frousse” invites listeners to keep dreaming, splash through the puddles anyway, and find courage in togetherness—because fear might always be there, but so is the chance to live boldly in spite of it.