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Rise To More

Rise To More

De: Jasna Burza
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Welcome to Rise to More—where who you become next is what matters. I’m Jasna Burza, a war survivor turned advisor to the world’s top minds. From the wildly successful lost at the top to visionaries chasing more, I’ve helped them elevate. How? Cut the noise. Act with grit. Lead with purpose. This isn’t just about success—it’s about becoming resilient, grounded and unshakable. Here, transformation is real, personal, and lasting—and whether you’re leading a company or rebuilding your life…you're ready to… rise to more. Come say hi on Instagram @jasna.burza ♥️ Buy book here: https://a.co/d/agOUrzv Please rate and review the podcast if you enjoy it. Remember, you are the one you have been waiting for.

jasnaburza.substack.comJasna Burza
Ciencias Sociales Desarrollo Personal Filosofía Éxito Personal
Episodios
  • The Beauty of This Lifetime
    Nov 10 2025
    Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.What does it mean to live fully—not someday, not when things calm down, not when the stars finally align—but now, in this lifetime? That question sat at the heart of my recent Rise to More conversation with my dear friend, writer, and kindred spirit, Jill Palmquist. Jill’s stunning book, In This Lifetime, is part coffee-table art, part spiritual companion—a love letter to being alive. Through words, photography, and quiet wisdom, she invites us to pause, to breathe, and to ask the questions that truly matter: Why are we here? And what will we do with our time?What I love about Jill is her reverence for the small. She can turn a stray chin hair into poetry. A morning walk into prayer. A shared laugh into a meditation on grace. She reminds us that meaning isn’t something we chase—it’s something we notice. Life’s depth lives not in grand gestures but in micro-moments: sunlight on your coffee, a stranger’s kindness, the warmth of your dog curled at your feet. This isn’t romantic idealism—it’s training your eyes to see. It’s remembering that joy, like air, is always available if we stop long enough to breathe it in.“Meaning isn’t hidden—it’s happening right in front of you.”One of the most profound parts of our conversation was Jill’s distinction between chronos and kairos—two very different ways of living time. Chronos is clock time: the deadlines, the calendars, the never-ending lists. Kairos is sacred time: the eternal moment that lives within every moment, if we have the courage to notice. When we live in kairos, five minutes can stretch into forever. Washing dishes can become worship. A quiet glance across a crowded room can hold the weight of a lifetime. That is how Jill lives. Not rushing toward the next thing, but opening to what is.“When we live in kairos, even five minutes can last a lifetime.”We talked about aging—about learning to make peace with our changing bodies and finding levity in what life offers us. Jill believes humor is one of our most powerful spiritual tools. “If we can’t laugh at ourselves,” she said, “we’re missing the whole point.” In a world obsessed with youth and achievement, she offers a radical antidote: gentleness. What if we wore life, as her father used to say, “like a loose garment”? Letting go. Softening. Making space for joy, for rest, for the messy, miraculous middle.Jill also shared stories of her late father—his wisdom, his laughter, his belief in the power of gathering. He taught her that friendship and joy are not luxuries. They are the very essence of a good life. It made me think of how often we save our best selves for special occasions. What if the special occasion is now?“Stop saving your joy for someday. Someday is happening right now.”This conversation wasn’t theoretical—it was an invitation. A call to reclaim our presence from the chaos. To return to the simplicity of being here. Because living fully isn’t about doing more—it’s about being awake to what’s already happening. It doesn’t take a silent retreat or a life overhaul. Sometimes it’s five mindful minutes in the shower. Sometimes it’s looking out your window and really seeing the light. Sometimes it’s choosing laughter over worry, surrender over striving.As Jill said so beautifully:“In this lifetime, let’s do it all. Let’s move through this world and have a really good time while we’re doing it.”So today, pause. Take a breath. Notice something beautiful right where you are. That’s it. That’s what it means to live—in this lifetime.Follow Jill and read her stories on Substack:IG: https://www.instagram.com/ohthatjillSubstack: jillpalmquist.substack.comBuy her book: https://inthislifetime.lifeWith love and gratitude,Jasna This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jasnaburza.substack.com
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    58 m
  • Jacob Frey: The Man, Not the Mayor
    Oct 9 2025

    When we see public figures, we rarely see the human being. We see a policy, a headline, a viral moment. What we don’t often glimpse is the person—the father fixing his daughter’s tiara, the husband leaning on his wife, the runner who finds peace by railroad tracks after a long day.

    In my recent Rise to More conversation with Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, I set aside politics entirely. I wanted to know the man behind the title.

    We live in polarized times. Outrage is the easiest currency to spend. Nuance is rare, compassion rarer. So I wanted to create a different kind of room. A room where we listen for humanity, not ammo. Where we remember we’re far more alike than different. And where transformation—individual and collective—still feels possible.

    What unfolded was a raw and deeply human conversation about fatherhood, resilience, and the quiet costs of leadership.

    Jacob spoke openly about being a father of two young girls and how they changed everything: the way he values time, the city he hopes to shape, the example he wants to set.

    We don’t talk enough about the toll of being known. The loss of breath and private space. The reality that when he steps outside, he is “the mayor” within seconds—no matter if he’s running alone by the railroad tracks or holding his four-year-old’s hand.

    He also spoke of hardship—moments when he stood firm in his decisions, was publicly shamed, and yet slept peacefully knowing he had done what he believed was right. From those experiences, he described something profound: post-traumatic growth—the ability to not just endure crisis, but to grow from it.

    We talked about the echo chambers, the easy blame, the brittle certainty. He said something simple and brave: when we’re unhappy, it’s seductive to assign our pain to an “other.” It’s also the beginning of dehumanization.

    The antidote? Burst your bubble on purpose. Seek people who think, pray, vote, and work differently than you. Have coffee. Share stories. Discover you actually like each other. It’s not naive—it’s necessary. Our nervous systems heal in proximity, not in posts.

    Topics we covered in this episode:

    * The perspective shift of fatherhood and raising daughters

    * How resilience is built in crisis and why “post-traumatic growth” matters

    * Running as both meditation and emotional release

    * Jewish tradition and the teaching of the “36 righteous people”

    * Keeping a soft heart in a hard, polarized world

    * His personal mantra: Find a way—to lead, to serve, to keep moving forward

    * What greatness and legacy mean to him

    What I found most moving was Jacob’s candor. He admitted flaws. He spoke of the weight of criticism, the freedom of authenticity, and the small, grounding rituals that keep him human.

    In the end, this wasn’t an interview about a mayor. It was a conversation with a man navigating the complexity of public life while striving to remain whole.

    And perhaps that is the lesson for us all: whatever our role, we must find a way. To love, to lead, to soften, to rise. And for the love of God, to see humanity in one another regardless of our differences.

    Please watch, listen or share.

    With gratitude,

    Jasna

    Thanks for reading! This post is public so feel free to share it.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jasnaburza.substack.com
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    54 m
  • Matchmaking Secrets Revealed
    Sep 17 2025
    Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.I believe love is the most powerful force in the world. It steadies us. It expands us. It’s the one thing success can’t replace.That’s why today’s story matters.I brought my dear friend and now business partner, Julie Spangler, onto Rise to More because she’s quietly changed thousands of lives—with a craft most people dismiss until they’re exhausted enough to admit they need it: high-end matchmaking.Julie spent 20+ years in corporate America (HR and marketing at major financial institutions), always with an eye for people. Connecting wasn’t a job; it was her reflex. In 2012, she did the unthinkable: walked away from the safe path and built a matchmaking firm grounded in values—privacy, discernment, and real care.Years later, I joined her as co-owner of Selective Connections because what she does is rare—and it works.Why apps are failing serious peopleDating apps had their moment. For many professionals, that moment is over. The swipe culture rewards speed, not sincerity. It’s instant gratification dressed up as connection. It leaves people lonelier and more guarded than before.The clients we serve can’t risk their privacy, their reputation, or their time. They outsource everything that matters—legal, finance, health. Why wouldn’t they bring in an expert for the most important decision of their life?What makes this differentJulie’s approach isn’t a numbers game. It’s deeply personal and fiercely intentional.* White-glove, not wild guesses. Every client goes through a thorough, human process. Interviews. Coaching. A bespoke profile crafted with professional photography. Alignment on values, lifestyle, non-negotiables.* Curated candidates. She meets, screens, and runs background checks on everyone in the ecosystem. Many arrive by referral. No randos. No mystery motives.* You choose. She presents a slate of excellent fits with the why behind each one. Both people opt in. No blind collisions.* Intuition with data. This is where she shines. The strategy is tight. The instincts are world-class. I’ve watched her connect two people before their paperwork was finished—and they were on a plane together a week later.And then there’s the part you won’t see on a website: men crying on the phone because someone finally helped them find their person. Widows in their 50s who thought love had passed them by—now planning a second act with a partner who gets it. Those calls matter.The thing no one tells you about “chemistry”We’ve been sold a movie montage. Fireworks. Sparks. Epic grand gestures. Here’s the truth: many of Julie’s strongest matches started as “meh” first dates.Sparks fizzle. The slow burn endures.First dates are awkward. Nerves can masquerade as “no spark.” The best relationships often come from a second or third date—where two people relax long enough to show who they really are. Compatibility, kindness, shared values, similar pace of life—these are the building blocks of a relationship that survives career pivots, illness, kids, and ordinary Tuesday nights.What men and women get wrong* Women: a 50-item checklist and a demand for instant fireworks. The right man may not arrive with cinematic flair. He might arrive as stability, respect, and consistent pursuit.* Men: underestimating how much warmth and kindness matter. The trait men consistently name as most attractive inside our process? Kindness.Both: stop trying to win the first hour. Learn if this person can be your friend, your sanctuary, your mirror—over time.Readiness matters more than resumeA lot of our clients have crushed every other area of life. That doesn’t mean something’s “wrong” because love hasn’t landed yet. It often means they built the career first and finally made space for the relationship.Readiness looks like this:* Willing to be seen and to listen.* Open to being coached.* Willing to date with curiosity, not cynicism.* Clear on values; flexible on packaging.If you’re resigned and bitter, that’s a different project. Hope is not naïve. It’s the door you walk through.Integrity is the lineThis industry, like coaching, attracts both healers and hustlers. We see the damage from the latter. Here’s where we stand:* No clients who are separated or married. Period.* We pass on people who don’t align with our values—even if they can pay.* We protect privacy like a sacred trust.* We say the hard thing when it’s the right thing.That’s why clients from twelve years ago still refer their friends. We sleep well at night.Two ways to work with us1) Private, one-to-one matchmakingWhite-glove, bespoke search. We build your profile, recruit precisely for you, present curated matches you approve, and even arrange first dates. High-touch and highly effective.2) VIP DatabaseA database membership with one guaranteed match drawn from our vetted community, plus the opportunity to be ...
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    50 m
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