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A Paper Giant: Psychological Analysis of Jean-Jacques Lafon's Song

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
6 min read
Listen to "Le geant de papier" on Spotify

In 1985, Jean-Jacques Lafon released "Le geant de papier" (The Paper Giant). The song became a massive popular success. Millions of French people hummed the chorus without necessarily pausing on the depth of the lyrics. Forty years later, reread through the lens of relational psychology, this song resonates with a striking accuracy.

The Song: A Strong Man Who Crumbles

The song features a man who presents himself as a powerful being -- "the wolf-man with a heart of steel" -- but who, facing the woman he loves, discovers himself to be completely vulnerable. He becomes a "paper giant": impressive in appearance, fragile in reality.

This contrast between outward strength and inner fragility is the heart of the song. But it is also, from a psychological standpoint, the central mechanism of pathological narcissism.

The False Self: When Strength Is Just a Costume

Psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott described the concept of the "false self" -- a facade personality constructed to mask the true self, deemed unacceptable. The man in the song embodies this duality:

  • The false self: the wolf-man, the heart of steel, the fighter, the one who can face anything
  • The true self: the paper giant, the one who trembles, who tears apart upon contact with intimacy
In psychology, this duality is found in narcissistic personalities. Behind the facade of omnipotence -- charm, confidence, control -- hides an extraordinarily fragile self-esteem. The narcissist is a paper giant living in terror of being discovered.

"I'm Afraid of Waking Her": Preserving Idealization

One of the most powerful themes in the song is this fear of waking the other -- of breaking the spell, of revealing the truth. In relational psychology, this phrase resonates deeply with the narcissistic dynamic:

From the narcissist's perspective: "I'm afraid of waking her" means preserving the idealization, not revealing the manipulation. The narcissist needs their victim to remain in the illusion -- to continue seeing the giant, not the paper. If she "awakens," if she opens her eyes, everything collapses. From the victim's perspective: this phrase can also be read as the fear of displeasing, of provoking anger, of breaking the precarious balance. How many victims of psychological hold walk on eggshells, measuring every word, every gesture, so as not to "awaken" the manipulator's fury?

This double reading -- who is afraid of whom? who is really sleeping? -- gives the text its psychological richness.

The Paper Metaphor: What Tears Easily

Paper is a fascinating material in psychology. It can carry the most powerful words -- love letters, contracts, declarations -- but it tears with a single gesture. The paper giant is:

  • Impressive from a distance: like the narcissistic facade
  • Fragile to the touch: like the manipulator's self-esteem
  • Flammable: like narcissistic rage when the facade is threatened
  • Recyclable: like the narcissist's promises, reused in each new relationship
This metaphor perfectly captures what therapists observe in consultation: the manipulative partner who seems invincible crumbles the moment you refuse to play their game.

The Wolf-Man: The Predator Who Plays the Victim

The song presents the narrator as a "wolf-man" -- a predator by nature. But this predator also presents himself as a victim of his own vulnerability. This is exactly the DARVO mechanism (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender) described by researcher Jennifer Freyd:

  • The narcissist is the wolf (they manipulate, control, dominate)
  • They present themselves as the lamb (they suffer, they're fragile, they need you)
  • The victim becomes the rescuer (she believes she must protect him from his own fragility)
  • This role reversal is at the heart of psychological hold: it is the victim who ends up protecting their tormentor.

    The Heart of Steel: Narcissistic Alexithymia

    The "heart of steel" evokes what psychologists call alexithymia -- the inability to identify and express one's emotions. The narcissist often presents an armored heart:

    • They never sincerely apologize
    • They cry only to manipulate
    • They confuse love with possession
    • They replace intimacy with control
    But the song suggests that this heart of steel melts in the face of the object of desire. In narcissistic psychology, this "melting" is not love -- it is narcissistic dependence. The narcissist needs the other not to love, but to exist.

    Fighting the Devil: Projection

    The song evokes the narrator's ability to fight all external threats -- except his own vulnerability in the face of the loved one. In psychology, this is the mechanism of projection: the narcissist fights all the external "devils" (rivals, critics, threats) but is incapable of looking at their own reflection.

    Carl Jung called this the shadow -- the part of ourselves we refuse to see. The paper giant is a man who faces the entire world but runs from himself.

    What Victims Recognize in This Song

    In therapy, many victims of narcissistic perverts recognize their partner in "Le geant de papier":

    • "He was so strong at the beginning" -- the idealization, the impressive giant
    • "He became a different person when we were alone" -- the paper that crumples
    • "He told me I was the only one who understood him" -- narcissistic dependence
    • "He would cry sometimes, and I stayed to comfort him" -- the victim/rescuer reversal
    • "I walked on tiptoe so as not to upset him" -- the fear of waking him
    These testimonies echo Lafon's text with a precision that the author probably never anticipated. Great songs transcend their creator's intent.

    The Song as a Tool for Awareness

    In therapy, music is often a powerful vehicle for awareness. "Le geant de papier" can serve as an entry point for a person who is not yet ready to name what they're experiencing.

    Saying "My partner is a narcissistic pervert" is difficult. Saying "My partner is like the paper giant" is gentler -- but just as revealing.

    Other Songs That Resonate with Psychological Hold:

    • "Love the Way You Lie" -- Eminem ft. Rihanna: the violence/reconciliation cycle
    • "No More Drama" -- Mary J. Blige: the decision to break free from the hold
    • "Toxic" -- Britney Spears: the irresistible attraction to the toxic person
    • "Comme d'habitude" -- Claude Francois: the routine of a couple in emotional distress
    • "Sous le vent" -- Garou and Celine Dion: sublimated emotional dependence

    Conclusion: Behind the Hit, a Psychological Truth

    Jean-Jacques Lafon wrote "Le geant de papier" as a love song about masculine vulnerability. But reread with the tools of relational psychology, this song illuminates a universal mechanism: the fragility hidden behind apparent omnipotence.

    Whether the paper giant in your life is a narcissistic partner, a toxic parent, or your own facade -- the message is the same: paper always tears in the end. What matters is what remains when the facade falls.

    If you are living with a paper giant, analyzing your conversations can help you objectively see the patterns -- because written messages, unlike paper giants, don't lie.


    Gildas Garrec, CBT psychotherapist in Nantes -- Psychologie et Serenite
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