Juno Burger

Surrender
True healing does not begin with fighting what is, but with recognizing who you truly are. In surrender, the struggle between you and life comes to an end. It is precisely there that space arises for compassion, freedom, and restoration. Not because circumstances always change, but because the suffering caused by those circumstances comes to an end.

Embodiment
Long before words arise, energy meets energy. In every connection, something is touched, opened, or protected. What you feel is not a coincidence, but an encounter with yourself. In this blog, you will discover how safety, tension, and compassion determine whether energy opens… or closes again.

Creator Beings
We are creator beings, but the greater part of our creative power operates unconsciously. In this blog, you will discover how shadow, patterns and old pain shape our reality — and why becoming conscious is not about blame, but about reclaiming responsibility, wholeness and inner freedom.

Free will
Free will feels like choosing, yet it arises in the space where you can observe without merging with your reaction. When comfort, trigger, and response become visible, something essential shifts. Not because you are in control — but because you become available for what wants to move through you.

The End of the Beginning
When you realize that it is in fact your own creation, the danger arises that you no longer blame someone else, but yourself. It is not about blame, but about awareness. That is why it is so relevant and meaningful to ask yourself what it is within you that creates the reality in and around you.

Syntropy and Entropy: the twin forces shaping
Entropy and syntropy act upon us simultaneously in every moment. We are constantly being pulled outward, toward individuality, and at the same time inward, toward unity. This tension forms the core of growth and the very heart of consciousness itself.

Individuation
From a young age, we learn how to become someone. We adapt, develop strategies to survive and belong, and do our best to meet the world’s expectations. Yet in our attempts to find ourselves, we often drift further away from what we already are at our core.

Ten steps forward, nine steps back
Long-term change is one of the hardest things we can attempt. In a very real sense, many of us have become addicts—not necessarily to substances, but to the ways we have conditioned ourselves to survive. Our upbringing, traumas, genetic coding, family dynamics, even echoes of what feels like past lives, have all shaped our nervous system and energy field.

Human medicine
In human relationships, an invisible stage often sets the scene for our struggles. On it plays a recurring drama called the triangle—a cycle of three roles: victim, perpetrator, and savior. This model, first described by Stephen Karpman, shows how easily we become entangled in patterns of blame, helplessness, and rescue.

Man plans, God Laughs
In this adventure of life, we cannot skip phases. We cannot avoid the dark forest or flush to victory. Life will take us through all the archetypal stages - ego, loss, despair, awakening - whether we plan it or not.

Show more