Fardeaux is a poetic French word for "burdens" or "heavy loads". It's a much more evocative and literary term than the more common word problèmes (problems).
In the song, Kimberose sings about Anita, who has come from afar and faced many hardships. The line "Du passé, de ses fardeaux" (About the past, about her burdens) gives a glimpse into the weight she carries. This one word adds a beautiful layer of depth to her story, making her resilience and joy in dancing all the more powerful.
Anita is a heartfelt tribute to a young woman who arrives in France without the language, the social “codes,” or many options, yet carries an unshakable gift: she can dance. Inside four bare walls, where life often feels limited, Anita transforms her struggles into rhythm. Her steps become a new vocabulary, letting her tell stories of distant homelands, heavy memories, and quiet hopes long before she masters French. Every spin on the floor sweeps away a little doubt, every sway of her hips pulls sunshine into rooms that once felt gray.
The singer quickly becomes Anita’s student, learning that the best remedy for worry is to move your feet. By following her lead, he discovers resilience, joy, and the simple magic of connection. Whenever “ça n’va pas”—when things are not going well—Anita’s answer is always the same: keep dancing. The song invites us to do the same, turning adversity into music and fear into graceful motion, until we too can find courage in the sparkle of someone else’s eyes and lose ourselves in the rhythm of hope.