Dus Is Neis -

There’s a certain kind of quiet that only falls after the last train has left the station. Not the silence of emptiness, but the hush of things settling—benches still warm from the afternoon, a forgotten newspaper lifting in the breeze, the neon sign of the kiosk buzzing low like a contented insect. And in that moment, standing at the edge of the platform with the city’s heartbeat softened to a murmur, you exhale something you didn’t know you were holding.

Dus is neis.

And for a moment, it is. More than enough. Just exactly that. dus is neis

Dus is neis.

There’s a world that rushes, that demands we name things precisely: this is adequate, this is acceptable, this is nice. But dus is neis —that belongs to the in-between. To the crack in the sidewalk where a dandelion pushes through. To the elderly couple on the bench, sharing a single pastry, their shoulders touching like parentheses around a secret. To the child who traces patterns in fogged-up glass, inventing constellations no astronomer will ever catalogue. There’s a certain kind of quiet that only

You could translate it. You could say “so this is nice” or “thus it is pleasant.” But translation would be a kind of betrayal. Because dus is neis holds a note of surprise, as if niceness had crept up unnoticed, a cat settling on your lap while you were busy worrying about larger things. It’s not a statement of fact—it’s a discovery. A small, ordinary miracle witnessed and named in the same breath.

The words come out strange, half-mumbled, as if borrowed from another language or another self. But they fit. They fit the crooked cobblestones, the way the streetlamp pools its light like spilled honey, the distant laugh of someone who has nowhere urgent to be. Dus is neis isn’t perfect grammar—it’s better. It’s the sound of relief, of small joys unpoliced by syntax. It’s what you say when a friend pours you tea without asking, when the rain stops exactly as you step outside, when a song you’d forgotten finds you again in a supermarket aisle. Just exactly that

And maybe that’s the point. That niceness, real niceness, doesn’t announce itself with fanfare. It arrives sideways, misspelled, slightly off-rhythm. It asks nothing of you except to be noticed. So you stand there, in the fading light, and you say it again, softer this time, to no one and to everyone: