I’m Serghei Sadohin, an author, columnist, and communicator by trade, but a wordsmith by nature. My journey with language began in Moldova, where I was raised bilingual, switching between tongues like a tightrope walker between worlds. This early juggling act sparked a lifelong fascination with words — not just what they mean, but how they mean. It’s no surprise, then, that I’ve spent my career weaving ideas into sentences, whether through my work in communications or my writing for outlets like The Brussels Times, New Eastern Europe, and Open Democracy.

Now living in Brussels, Belgium, the crossroads of Europe, where languages collide and coexist. I’ve poured my passion for existential philosophy and linguistics into my book, Hiding in Plain Sight: What Language Says About Being Human. It’s a deep dive into the currents of language, exploring how the words we use reveal more about who we are than we’d ever expect. I think that language is humanity’s oldest mirror — and it doesn’t always flatter.

When I’m not writing, I’m often caught in the flow of Brussels’ lively multilingual culture, pondering how words, much like people, navigate the messy business of belonging. For me, words are never just words. They’re bridges, riddles, and occasionally traps — and I wouldn’t have it any other way. Welcome to my corner of the web; let’s make some connections, one word at a time.

About Me