Throughout my career, I have been deeply curious about learning: what it means, how it happens, and what facilitates or hinders it. My own trajectory, from philosophy to neuroscience and ultimately education, reflects this continuous exploration. Philosophy provided the tools for asking foundational questions about knowledge and meaning making. Later, neuroscience offered me empirical ways to explore how the brain physically achieves this remarkable feat. I started becoming interested in translational neuroscience, a field that helps bridge the gap between theoretical insights from the lab and practical applications in everyday life. The goal of translational neuroscience is to shine light on the importance of bringing scientific understanding into accessible formats. Today, I continue to turn to neuroscience because I believe its discoveries can help shape education and broader societal practices beyond the confines of labs, petri dishes, and computer models. In other words, making neuroscience accessible and comprehensible to everyone is crucial; doing so democratizes knowledge, empowers individuals and communities, and can help foster deeper, more meaningful learning. For me, education naturally became the space to help translate this scientific knowledge into practices that nurture and support learning.