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Gratitude, Tinder therapy, and abductions in the souk

In this personal essay, I describe a snapshot of my life in Tunisia – shaped by gratitude, human closeness, and unexpected support in daily life. The text is not a report about dating or safety but a reflection on connection, trust, and the feeling of being supported despite distance.

The invisible net

I have never felt so connected, even though I am so far away.

Steven, Nadia, Janina, Dave, Maia – I do not “miss” you in a sad sense because you are already here. Your joy when I appear on your phones gives me strength for the day. You live in my chest like extra lungs.

My Swiss family – we grew closer in the moment I chose distance. I love you all. Please: no more real estate crises.


Riadh, delivered to my front door

Without him, I wouldn’t have made it through this week. He is Luna’s chosen deity and my quiet, reliable companion. He listens, carries, translates culture, and offers companionship without comments.

Bonus level: his mother. Strolling through the souk of Sousse with mom; having your hair cut in a salon that feels like an 80s laundromat; realizing that family is sometimes only borrowed – and that this is beautiful.


Ramailo: Deep healing via Tinder

Random match, kindred spirit. Here in my darkest night, with swollen eyes and sleepless, I reached out a virtual hand – he took it. Our conversations nourish me so much that I feel full for days. If he doesn’t knock again, I will.


Jawhar: The annoying angel of “Just say no”

He pushes me to the edge – with the truth. No saves time. But if I always said no, I’d miss being charmed with sweet words at the souk and being politely “kidnapped” three alleys away into a ceramics shop. The Swiss “Jein” (meaning: yes, no, and maybe) is in my DNA. Sometimes indecision is the doorbell to adventure.

Mantra (Part 2): Life is currently heavy metal – too loud to be safe, too good to be boring.


Thank You List (for my future self)


What remains


What goes

P.S. I am doing well. I am tired. I am proud. Tunisia is my chaotic classroom and my favorite punchline.


Next up (Teaser for Week 3):

Hair adventures (Botox/Keratin/Glossing decoded), the quest for office chairs, and Route des Terrorists, uh, Tourorrists—Hard Mode.

  • The text is a personal snapshot from my life in Tunisia.
  • It focuses on gratitude, connection, and human support.
  • Mentioned situations are deliberately exaggerated and not to be taken literally.
  • The post is not a report on security, dating, or therapy.
  • It describes the emotional arrival in a new environment.
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