01.

What this actually is

Zendeville helps to develop fundamental performance skills with one of the oldest and well researched practices in the world: zen training.

With the right training anyone can build their own zen practice for more focus, clarity and mental resilience. Without further dependency on systems or frameworks.

02.

The facts

Yes, effects are measurable: improved attention (Jha et al. 2007), reduced mind-wandering (Brewer et al. 2011), and changes in brain structure (Lazar et al. 2005). But only in people who actually train.

  • Improved focus and sustained attention
  • Less mind-wandering (reduced DMN activity)
  • Faster recognition of distraction and returning to the task

These effects are consistently found in studies such as MacLean et al. 2010 and Lutz et al. 2008.

Research shows that programs of around 8 weeks with daily practice already make a difference. Occasional or sporadic practice generally does not lead to lasting effects.

No. The primary effect is attention training. Relaxation may occur, but it is not the goal and not guaranteed.

Not a quick fix. But a trainable skill that (when applied) leads to more stable attention and less noise in thinking.

There is overlap, but zen specifically focuses on training attention and awareness. Relaxation or movement may be part of other practices, but is not the main objective here.

When training is done regularly and over a longer period, effects on attention and mental stability tend to become more pronounced. As with physical training, results depend less on the method itself and more on frequency, duration, and consistency of practice.

That’s why this training is designed to help people build a consistent zen practice.

 

Because the effect is cumulative. Like physical training, results only become noticeable after sufficient repetition and load.

One core skill: noticing that your attention has drifted, and bringing it back.
This mechanism directly underlies focus, decision-making, and mental clarity.

No. The effects observed in research are linked to training attention through repeated practice, not to belief or mindset. Studies on meditation and attention training show measurable changes in attention and brain function regardless of personal beliefs (e.g. Jha et al. 2007; Brewer et al. 2011).

What does matter is whether the training is actually done, and done consistently. Like physical training, the mechanism works through repetition and exposure, not conviction.

03.

Why it matters now

04.

Check the programs

ORGANIZATIONS

For organizations where speed and complexity

are accelerating.

CUSTOM

For professionals who

want to maintain clarity and insight.

05.

This is why we do it

IN A WORLD DRIVEN BY AI,
FOCUS IS THE GREATEST ASSET.