Arriving in Tunisia – Week 2 in Kantaoui

In this personal report, I describe my second week after arriving in Tunisia – between traffic, everyday conflicts, boundary setting, and growing assertiveness. This text is not a guide but a subjective snapshot of what arriving in week two can feel like: louder, clearer, and more self-determined.

Small does not mean quiet: Luna finds her roar on the beach, I upgrade my street-crossing protocol on the Route Touristique, and a landlady wants me to finance her sofa. Heavy-metal life – too loud to be safe, too good to be boring.


Route Touristique (Bossfight Edition)

The Route Touristique is not a street. It is a final boss.
Four lanes of honking metal, a flowing traffic jam of at least 40 km/h on weekends. It cleanly splits Kantaoui into two parts:

My side: beach, apartment, cigarettes, dog food, baby cats.
Other side: water, supermarket, potential hairdresser, beautiful office chairs (how expensive, please?!), pharmacy.

No matter how much traffic there is – I have to cross.

Week 1: I wait politely and get a sunburn.
Week 2: I cheat. I stick 20 cm behind a local’s back, praying to Allah while bumpers flirt with my knees.
Week 3 (now): Assertiveness 2.0 – installed.


Crossing Protocol v2.0

  • Walk straight ahead. Shoulders back, chin up. Don’t hesitate.
  • Laser stare. The look that says: ‚I exist. I’m crossing now. You’ll manage.‘
  • Choose a slot. Like compiled code: the path is written, now execute.
  • Optional Swiss German audio track (in case carbon or metal gets too close):
    “Chuechichästli Fondue, you silly foot archer – brake now or explain to Allah why you just crushed a grandmother. Stop it.”
  • Commitment. No jumping, no sprinting – determined walking.

Result: The hell remains, but I am no longer prey. Boundaries in motion.


Real-Estate Follies: Sofa Series A

Yesterday: Truce by handshake with Dahmen – “everything in writing, we agree.”
Today: The owner wants two months’ rent in advance – to buy herself… a sofa.

I don’t rent apartments to finance furniture start-ups. Fuck-off mode activated. Immediate termination. It was never home – just a chapter.


Little Luna, Big Queenship

Blue hour at the beach. Salt in the air, four dogs, one man, two meters of leash – and me.

Riadh shows Luna how to set boundaries when three majestic beach dogs come a bit too close. No fight, more choreography: a magnetic little ballet of paws, sand, and backbone.

I watch my terrier shake off all the Swiss don’ts: don’t bark, don’t jump, don’t exist too loudly.
And here she is: barking, running, laughing, living. And my own backbone straightens with hers. We may bark. We may say No. We may be small and still take up space.

Mantra of the week: Small does not mean quiet.


Learnings from week 2

  • Don’t wait for gaps – move like code being executed.
  • Beware of landlords with Ikea catalogs.
  • Street dogs are cheaper than therapy and sometimes better.
  • Small doesn’t matter. Being audible is survival.

  • The text describes my second week after arriving in Tunisia.
  • The focus is on traffic, everyday conflicts, and personal boundary setting.
  • Themes include assertiveness, housing, dog encounters, and self-assertion.
  • It’s not about rules or instructions but about experiences.
  • The post is a subjective snapshot of an early arrival phase.
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Zia M.

Schweizerin im Exil, Tunesien-Version. Ich lebe in Chatt Meriem, sammle Geschichten, teste Apartments, schreibe darüber und versuche, den Alltag hier mit einer Mischung aus Neugier, Sarkasmus und gesundem Chaos zu meistern. Ich baue Webseiten, lerne Tunesisch-Arabisch, zügle meine Terrier-Queen Luna und erkläre Auswanderern, wie man in Tunesien überlebt, ohne dabei komplett auszurasten. How to Tunisia? Ich mache die Fehler. Du liest die Anleitung.

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