New nationwide program addresses rising mental health concerns among expatriate professionals in Switzerland, with focus on prevention and community building.

"Banking, big pharma, multinational and corporate global headquarters... provide the golden cages which attract so many people."
"As men, we are conditioned to hide our emotions. This has dogged us for millennia."
A staggering statistic haunts the pristine landscapes of Switzerland: three times as many men commit suicide here than women. This grim reality stands in stark contrast to the postcard-perfect image of Swiss life, exposing a silent crisis gripping the expatriate community. While the world sees chocolate, slopes, and stability, a growing number of professionals are grappling with a darker truth. Leading the charge against this epidemic is the newly expanded "Blokes and Black Dogs" initiative, a support network designed to pull men back from the brink.
Founded by British expat veteran Carl Wahlers, who arrived in the Lake Geneva region in 2002, the program directly confronts the isolation that plagues men over 40. These are not just statistics; they are fathers, colleagues, and friends often left "high and dry" by the very lifestyle they sought to achieve. The initiative challenges the deadly stigma of stoicism, asserting that in a country known for its high altitude, the lows can be fatal if faced alone. The message is loud, clear, and urgent: the silence must end now.
The allure of Switzerland is undeniable, but for many, it transforms into a suffocating "golden cage." Banking giants, big pharma, and the United Nations offer lucrative roles that attract top talent from the UK and North America, yet these positions often come with a devastating hidden cost. Carl Wahlers describes a landscape of "soaring expectations" and "manufactured sterile communities" where the pressure to maintain a facade of success is crushing.
Despite the exceptional standard of living and outdoor recreation, the reality for many expats involves severe life disruption and a total lack of work/life balance. The disconnect is palpable. Professionals find themselves in a cycle of high-pressure performance and social isolation, struggling to forge genuine ties with local communities. This environment creates a breeding ground for anxiety and substance abuse, turning the dream of a wealthy lifestyle into a nightmare of loneliness. The initiative warns that without intervention, the "luxury" of expat life can quickly become a prison of mental anguish.
The corporate guillotine falls swiftly, and with it, often goes a man's sense of self. In an uncertain geopolitical climate, the fear of redundancy is a constant specter haunting international professionals. Wahlers, who was made redundant in 2017 during a corporate rationalization, witnessed firsthand the devastation it causes. He saw men "losing their perceived identity," struggling to navigate a world where their worth was no longer tied to a job title. It was, in his words, "bloody tough."
This loss of purpose is a critical trigger for the "Black Dog" of depression—a term borrowed from Winston Churchill to describe his own prolonged battles. Imposter syndrome runs rampant, and when the career ladder is kicked away, burnout and depression often rush in to fill the void. The initiative highlights that this is not an isolated phenomenon but a systemic issue within the transient expat workforce. By anchoring self-worth solely in professional achievement, men are leaving themselves dangerously exposed to mental health catastrophes when the market shifts.
Against this backdrop of silent suffering, a new lifeline has emerged based on three simple but powerful pillars: Community, Connection, and Conversation. Inspired by the UK's "Andy’s Man Club," the Swiss initiative offers a judgment-free zone where confidentiality is guaranteed. The goal is to normalize the conversation around mental health, dismantling the millennia-old conditioning that demands men remain "strong, stoic, and silent."
This is not just a support group; it is a cultural shift. By encouraging authentic, honest conversations, the program allows men to drop the masks society has imposed on them. The auto-response of "I'm fine" is replaced with genuine dialogue. Since its first meeting at the Impact Hub in Lausanne in 2018, the movement has proven that the antidote to isolation is connection. As the network expands, it offers a critical reminder to every expat professional in Switzerland: You do not have to carry the burden alone. The power of conversation is saving lives, one meeting at a time.