Nama-rupa (name and form) expresses Abhidharma's non-dualistic understanding that consciousness and physicality co-arise as a unified psychosomatic process.
Abhidharma rejects both pure idealism and pure materialism by positing nama-rupa as interdependent processes: nama (mind, mental phenomena) and rupa (form, physical phenomena) arise together and cannot be reduced to either alone. This framework directly informs Patanjali's yoga, which treats the body as the entry point to mind mastery through asana and pranayama while simultaneously refining consciousness through meditation. The nama-rupa principle means that working with the physical body through yogic postures and breath directly shapes mental states, while controlling the mind through concentration purifies energetic and physical patterns. This explains why Abhidharma-informed yoga practices address the whole person: meditation alone is incomplete without somatic cultivation, and physical practice alone lacks the penetrative insight of mind. Understanding nama-rupa's inseparability reveals the body as not separate from consciousness but as its dense manifestation, making every physical practice a gateway to psychological transformation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.