I’m Sandra. Born with a hole in my heart and raised in the GDR, so no, I didn’t grow up with dreams. I grew up with survival skills. If you wanted something, you fought for it. Freedom. A future. Bana
I’m Sandra. Born with a hole in my heart and raised in the GDR, so no, I didn’t grow up with dreams. I grew up with survival skills. If you wanted something, you fought for it. Freedom. A future. Bananas. When the Wall fell, I climbed into a cattle wagon to the West, stood eight hours in line for 100 Deutsche Mark… and lost it within five minutes. Welcome to capitalism. It takes your money and leaves you with a life lesson. After that, I did what many women do without realizing it: I built a life that looked right. Not one that felt right. House. Kids. Marriage. Thirty years. From the outside: perfect. From the inside: slowly disappearing. Not in a dramatic way. No explosion. No scandal. Just a quiet, efficient vanishing act. Until one day, life pulled the plug. Marriage? Gone. Security? Gone. Illusions? Especially gone. And there I was. Late forties. Divorced. Emotionally bankrupt. Still functioning like nothing happened, which is honestly the biggest red flag of all. By day, I played the role. By night, I stared at my life like it belonged to someone else. So yes, I tried dating. Because nothing says “healing” like voluntarily entering a marketplace of confused men with WiFi. Spoiler: It was worse than my marriage. And just when I thought, “Okay, this is it. This is my slightly tragic, mildly embarrassing second half,” the universe did what it does best: It made things even more absurd. Egypt. A country I had avoided for 45 years with impressive consistency. Thanks to my ex, proof that even bad decisions can accidentally lead somewhere useful. Plot twist: I didn’t just go. I stayed. Now I live there. Married to an Egyptian man. On the Nile. Yes, really. No, I didn’t see that coming either. This isn’t a glow-up story. This is what happens when everything falls apart… and instead of dying, you keep going out of pure stubbornness. My life didn’t make sense. It still doesn’t. But for the first time, it’s actually mine. I’m Sandra. And my real life started the moment everything went to hell. Turns out: losing everything isn’t the end. It’s just where things finally get interesting.