Living in Tunisia – The Tunisian Winter: A Country to Die For (2)

In this personal report, I describe my first winter in Tunisia – between lack of heating, improvisation, culture shock, and the surprising difference between Swiss and Tunisian cold. This text is not a guide, but a subjective everyday experience from Chatt Meriem.

When I planned my move from Switzerland to Tunisia, I only worried about one thing: the summer.

The heat.
Forty degrees.
Survival.

I work from home, Tunisian houses stay cool, and in the worst case there is air conditioning. Besides, Tunisian summer nights are warm, lively, and pleasant. At 3 a.m. there are still cafés, food, cigarettes, life. Unlike in Switzerland, where the sidewalks politely close at 10 p.m.

Hot summers?
Perfect.
Bring it on.

Living in Tunisia – when expectations meet reality

What I was not prepared for was the Tunisian winter.

Ten degrees Celsius sounds charming from the perspective of Switzerland. Almost springlike. Every Swiss winter without a minus sign is considered a luxury experience. So I smiled, packed a slightly thicker jacket, and carried on with my life.

Mistake.

In December, I still lived in a heated apartment and sent smug selfies to friends back home. Sunshine. Blue skies. Guaranteed envy. Switzerland was sinking in fog; I had the golden ticket.

Then came the offer: a brand new apartment. Panoramic windows. Sea view.

Construction site atmosphere, but pipes sticking out of the walls. To my Swiss mind, this clearly meant: There will be heating. Why else would these pipes be there? Decoration? Minimalist art? Coat hangers?

Fast forward: Early January. I move in.

No gas.
No heating.
No hot water.

Welcome to the Tunisian winter.

I quickly learned something important:
Minus fifteen degrees in Switzerland are harmless. Because they only last twenty minutes – between two heated rooms.
Ten degrees in Tunisia accompany you day and night. Relentlessly.

I spent days wrapped in wool blankets like a tragic burrito. Cleaning was a fantasy. Showering became a historical reenactment. I boiled water with a kettle and washed myself using medieval techniques.

And then there were the trips to the toilet.

I don’t know if it’s medically possible to freeze to death at ten degrees. But when you sit on an ice-cold ceramic toilet at night – naked, vulnerable, questioning your life choices – it definitely feels like an excellent way to die.

Tunisia. A country you would die for.

Promises were made daily. Solutions were not. I was told I was exaggerating. That I lacked patience. That this was normal.

One night I almost booked a flight back to Switzerland. Instead, I insulated the door gaps with clothes, cried a little, cuddled my freezing dog, and fell asleep.

The next morning I embraced my inner Tunisian.

Surviving the Tunisian winter – improvisation instead of comfort

I lied creatively. About authorities. About urgency. About imaginary phone calls. Within 24 hours, a provisional gas line appeared – a masterpiece of improvisation, held together by optimism and a belief that defied the laws of physics.

There was hot soup again.
Hope returned.

I bought an oil heater. Then an air conditioner – to get through the winter. It was installed within a day.

Now I pay for the heating myself.

Is that fair?
No.

Is it warm?
Yes.

And right now, warmth is not a luxury.
It is survival.

  • The text describes my personal experience with winter in Tunisia.
  • The focus is on cold, lack of heating, and improvisation in everyday life.
  • It is not about technical solutions or instructions.
  • The article highlights the emotional difference between Swiss and Tunisian winter.
  • The text is a subjective observation about adaptation and survival.
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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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