This reflective essay traces the author’s journey from a village school in northern Finland to international roles in educational policy, research, and leadership, framed through the evolving identity of an education warrior. It explores how formative “green light” and “sliding doors” moments across a varied career together with sustained classroom teaching, system-level reform leadership in Finland, and work with international organisations such as the World Bank, the OECD and the European Commission shaped a professional commitment to equity, trust, and whole-child development. Rather than presenting a linear career narrative, the essay highlights how uncertainty, serendipity, and moral conviction interacted to guide professional choices in unexpected situations over time. The essay concludes by distilling four lessons for emerging professionals and early-career educators: defending moral purpose in education development; learning from constructive “good trouble”; responding courageously to unexpected opportunities to lead and learn; and reframing disappointment as a source of renewal and possibility. As long as education warriors, both young and old, continue to act with purpose, humility, and hope, education retains its capacity to light a way forward in times of uncertainty. • Reflects on a educator’s journey from school classrooms in Finland to a global policy arenas. • Argues equity, trust, and whole-child focus as reform drivers. • Distils four lessons for future education “warriors”.
Pasi Sahlberg (Tue,) studied this question.