Emigrating from Switzerland – 24 days to go until departure

Auswandern aus der Schweiz – Noch 24 Tage bis zum Abflug

In this very personal article, I describe my last weeks before emigrating from Switzerland – between farewells, exhaustion, hope and the conscious break with my country of origin. The text is aimed at people who are interested in personal experiences of emigrating from Switzerland – beyond checklists and advice guides.

Only 24 days left. Then I get on a plane and fly away – away from a country that never really wanted me. Behind me: an apartment that has become a storage room. Half-packed suitcases, discarded furniture, the remains of my „life“. I got rid of almost everything. Sold (for next to nothing). Gave it away (a huge effort). Thrown away (with gritted teeth).

What’s left fits into a 23 kg checked suitcase, a 5 kg piece of hand luggage and a dog carrier. And what doesn’t come with me, I leave behind – including all my doubts.


Emigrating from Switzerland – my personal farewell

I’m going to get my life back

I want to go. Without sadness. Without sentimentality. I no longer have any illusions about my home country. Even the nicest Swiss react to everything that bothers them with a quiet, polite frown – accompanied by structural contempt. They don’t hate out loud. They disqualify with articles: the Albanians. the Turks. the Debtor. the Drug addicts. Of course, these are all just isolated cases – as long as you don’t listen too closely.


Gallows humor helps with packing

What’s keeping me here? Nothing anymore. What draws me there? The hope of real humanity – even if it is chaotic, messy and unstable.

I am not naive. I know what I’m getting myself into. I’m moving to a country where not everything is over-regulated, where many things just happen. In the truest sense of the word. Sometimes a house burns down because nobody pays attention to safety standards. Sometimes a roller coaster derails. And sometimes you get arrested for giving a bottle of water to a thirsty refugee.

But there is also something liberating about the fact that not all is regulated. When there isn’t a system at every corner that controls, evaluates and catalogs you – and then politely but firmly pushes you aside if you don’t fit into the norm.


Why I go despite my fear – between hope and uncertainty

Democracy light – with human warmth

In Switzerland, I would be surprised if someone stormed parliament tomorrow. In Tunisia … let’s just say it would be interesting, but not entirely unexpected. It is a country in upheaval – unstable, contradictory, vibrant.

And yes, that is scary. But not as much as the cold perfectionism of my home country. Switzerland has a lot to be proud of: Stability, security, the rule of law. But perhaps it is precisely this sterile efficiency that makes many people chronically incapable of putting empathy above prejudice.

I have no answers to these contradictions. Only one decision: I’m leaving.

Not because I’m running away from something – but because I’m looking for something that I’ve never found here.

  • The text describes my personal situation in the last few weeks before emigrating from Switzerland.
  • The focus is on farewells, exhaustion and the desire for a different life.
  • It is not about organisational preparation or legal steps.
  • The article deliberately addresses ambivalence, fear and hope.
  • The text is a personal account of my experiences – not an emigration guide.
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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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