Living in Switzerland – How To Switzerland (Part 1/2)

In this personal account, I describe what life in Switzerland feels like from the perspective of an expatriate – between social rules, social control and constant expectations of correct behaviour. Using everyday examples such as smoking, night-time quiet hours, dog ownership and waste disposal, I show why I felt increasingly restricted in Switzerland.

If you are a Swiss citizen living in Tunisia, there is one question you are bound to hear frequently:

„Why did you leave wealthy, perfect Switzerland to come to Tunisia?“

For Tunisians, this is a completely absurd idea.

Voluntarily leave a European country?

A country with security, cleanliness, a healthcare system, money and order?

Why on earth would anyone move from there to here?

Especially if someone has never been to Europe – let alone Switzerland – they cannot even begin to imagine that ‘perfect’ sometimes means perfectly suffocating.

So I decided to write down my answer in detail.

Because the reasons cannot be explained in three sentences.

Switzerland is beautiful, yes.

But it is also a country full of unspoken rules, social taboos and silent expectations that come as a culture shock, especially for people with a southern European understanding of society.

And that’s exactly why I’m now presenting my list of things that are officially or unofficially prohibited in Switzerland –

in other words, a detailed explanation of

why I prefer to live my life in Tunisia

– and why I don’t voluntarily live in a perfectly polished glass display case.


Living in Switzerland – my personal observations

Things that are officially or unofficially prohibited in Switzerland

(…or simply so socially frowned upon that, as a foreigner, you’ll be pulverised before you can say ‘Hoi’.)


1) Smoking – Switzerland’s ultimate enemy

In Switzerland, smoking is a kind of high-risk sport.

It is formally prohibited everywhere and informally even more so.

  • Not only in restaurants, cafés, shops and bars.
  • Also at train stations and bus stops (outdoors!).
  • In your own rented flat → Go ahead – but only if you want to sell your kidney for the final coat of paint.
  • On the balcony → theoretically allowed, but in practice the non-smoker above you will hunt you down if a single cloud drifts into their open window.
  • At the lake → a gust of wind in the wrong direction = social death.
  • Next to a stranger who happens to be breathing? No, either.
  • In the car with children → forbidden, or at least a no-go with immediate moral death sentence.

2) Night-time rest – the sacred commandment

From 10 p.m. to 7 a.m., Switzerland is not simply quiet at night – it is sacredly silent.

During this time, you may:

  • not cough.
  • not close the toilet lid too loudly.
  • not move a chair.
  • not own a dog that breathes.
  • not speak loudly.
  • not laugh (quiet giggling is acceptable – but QUIET).
  • not vacuum.
  • not shower.
  • not play the piano.
  • not sing.
  • not live.

Everything about it?

→ Note on the door.
→ Complaint to the property management.
→ Police, if music is involved.


3) Dogs – please treat like quiet decorations

The Swiss love dogs – as long as they don’t bark, run around, seem lively or show emotion.

  • Dogs should not bark – not during the day, and certainly not at night.
  • Biting or scratching = report to the authorities, veterinary office and something akin to social execution.

Free running only if it:

  • moves slowly
  • freezes like a Buddha statue, at ‘Stop!’
  • functions like Lassie on Ritalin in every situation

Anything else?
→ Leash.
→ Or neighbourhood stake.


4) Waste – Switzerland’s supreme discipline

The waste regime has its own rules, its own philosophy and perhaps even its own religion.

This is how you get rid of rubbish:

  • You may only use the official, state-approved bin bags.
  • They cost about as much as a good dinner in Sousse.
  • Only put them out on the correct day of the week.
  • And definitely NOT the night before.
  • Don’t oversleep either: get up at 6 a.m. if the collection is at 7:03 a.m.

Missed the collection?
Don’t even think about putting the smelly bag on the balcony, in the stairwell or in the basement.
Keep it in your flat for a week.
Does it really stink? Well done. That’s your punishment for oversleeping on collection day again.

Cigarette butts belong in your wallet, in your sock or anywhere else – just NOT on the ground.
Public bins are for absolute emergencies only.
A piece of sandwich paper weighing less than 20 grams is fine.
Anything else is vandalism.

Plastic bags? They’re available. For a fee, of course.
And morally speaking, you’re still a polluter.
Anyone with any decency brings their own reusable jute bag.


Let’s continue with prohibitions 5, 6, 7 and my conclusion in this article How To Switzerland – Teil 2 von 2

  • The text describes my personal experiences with social rules in Switzerland.
  • The focus is on social control, pressure to conform and fear of deviation.
  • The examples (smoking, quiet hours, dogs, rubbish) are representative of a highly regulated everyday life.
  • The article is deliberately subjective and satirical.
  • It explains why I feel freer living in Tunisia than in Switzerland.
Avatar-Foto

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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