Principle

Zanshin

Remaining awareness

Continue awareness before, during, and after action; do not mentally collapse at the finish.

Apply today

Prompt: Where did I switch off too early today?

Practice: Hold one breath of awareness after each completed action.

Personal

  • Where in my personal life did I live Zanshin today?
  • Where did I abandon Zanshin when I felt pressure or discomfort?
  • What one concrete action tomorrow would better embody Zanshin?

Work

  • How can I apply Zanshin to one important work decision today?
  • Where did reactivity, comparison, or ego interfere with my professional conduct?
  • What single correction at work will I carry into tomorrow?

From the manuscript

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Part II — The Principles — Chapter 11 · The Quiet Mind · Peter Van Tienen

Zanshin — Remaining mind

Zanshin is often translated as “remaining mind” and is commonly described in martial arts as a state of continued awareness, alertness, and readiness before, during, and after action. It is not merely a dramatic finishing posture. It is the refusal to mentally collapse the moment an action appears complete.

This principle is easy to admire and hard to maintain because modern attention is discontinuous. We lunge toward the obvious moment and then drop our awareness once that moment has passed. The strike lands, the form ends, the conversation concludes, the task is submitted, and the mind releases itself too early. Zanshin closes that gap.

In technical training, zanshin means you do not disappear after execution. Your posture, breath, gaze, and readiness continue. In sparring, you do not celebrate a clean entry and immediately become vulnerable. In kata, the ending is not decorative; it reveals whether the sequence stayed alive through completion. In self-defense, it is what keeps a person from assuming a threat is gone too soon.

The transfer to daily life is straightforward and powerful. Zanshin in conversation means you do not stop listening once you have said your part. Zanshin in work means you do not mentally leave a task the moment you press send; you review, verify, and remain responsible. Zanshin in leadership means you do not issue direction and disappear. You stay present to consequence.

One of the reasons zanshin feels demanding is that it contradicts the dopamine rhythm of modern attention. We like completion events. We like the feeling of “done.” Zanshin asks for one more breath, one more second of awareness, one more layer of responsibility. It turns endings into continuities.

End-of-action drill

After every training combination, kata ending, or focused task:

  • hold your posture for one breath
  • keep your eyes active
  • notice your tendency to mentally switch off
  • reset only after awareness remains continuous

This tiny discipline transforms more than it appears to.