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The Lone Ranger and Tonto Meet Buddha

Masks, Meditation, and Improvised Play to Induce Liberated States

Published by Inner Traditions
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

• Shares a series of mindfulness techniques and improv exercises with masks to suppress the ego, calm the mind, and allow spontaneous playfulness and spaciousness to arise from your deepest nature

• Draws on Buddhist philosophy to describe how and why the exercises work

• Woven throughout with a lighthearted parable of an overweight and out-of-work Lone Ranger and Tonto who meet Buddha and experience spiritual awakening

Sharing a series of mindfulness techniques and acting exercises that show how malleable the self can be, award-winning actor, narrator, and Zen Buddhist priest Peter Coyote reveals how to use masks, meditation, and improvisation to free yourself from fixed ideas of who you think you are and help you release your ego from constant defensive strategizing, calm the mind’s overactivity, and allow spontaneous playfulness to arise out of your deepest nature. Developed through 40 years of research and personal study, Coyote’s synthesis of mask-based improv games and Zen practices is specifically designed to create an ego-suppressed state akin to the mystical experiences of meditation or the spiritual awakenings of psychedelics. After preparatory exercises, seeing yourself in a mask will temporarily displace your familiar self and the spirit of the mask will take over.

Likening the liberated state induced by mask work to “Enlightenment-lite,” Coyote draws on Buddhist philosophy to describe how and why the exercises work as well as how to make your newly awakened and confident self part of daily life. In true Zen form, woven throughout the narrative is a lighthearted parable of an out-of-work Lone Ranger and Tonto, who meet Buddha and experience spiritual awakening. Illuminating the lessons of mask work, the transformation of the Lone Ranger mirrors that of the individual pursuing this practice, revealing how you will come to realize that the world is more magical and vaster than you thought possible.

Excerpt

From Chapter 3. Working with Masks

Without some training, simply placing a mask over your face and looking in a mirror may paralyze rather than liberate your imagination. Occasionally, the experience of “disappearing” proves unsettling to some. One night, a seasoned Zen student, was visiting and insisted on trying on a mask. Despite having done no warm-ups or preparations, I was curious to see what might occur and agreed.

When he encountered his masked reflection, he became emotionally frozen. He could describe what he felt arising from the mirror, but some emotional detachment prevented him from expressing his feelings as behavior. He could not integrate new impulses into his body or psyche in any way, nor could he express any intention. The “self” is a strict master and has to be either exhausted or seduced to let go.

Old psychic wounds and impressions, once too important to forget, are deeply buried in our muscles and ligaments. Like landmines abandoned after a war, they remain hidden, their potential for damage undiminished by time. A psychiatrist once told me, “In the unconscious, it’s always this morning,” meaning that the unconscious has no sense of time. All its memories are pungent and immediate. However, even in the extreme case of my Zen friend, wearing a mask highlighted a path by identifying a problem he could not deny. Suffice it to say, since then, I have never short-changed warm-up games and exercises. Consequently, I urge students (and readers) to be patient during descriptions of exercises that appear at first blush to have little or nothing to do with egoless states.

Pointless or silly as they may appear, these games are not addressed to the intellect, but to the body and Big Mind, the surrounding vastness in which all ideas about oneself float. Enlightenment is not something we think about, but express in each moment. Each exercise is designed to alter some sense of the body’s feelings about “normal” by coaxing you to imagine, move, stand, behave, and project yourself in ways which appear to you as counter-intuitive and definitely not-you. These simple games expose the borders and “soften” the sense of self by encouraging you to explore attitudes, feelings, physical postures, intentions, and behavior beyond the safety of your known persona. If, for instance, you begin to move in a way that does not feel like you, it’s possible to become fully aware of that resistance, identify it, and study it clearly rather than dismiss it or flee its influence. Why is it not you? What’s wrong with it, other than your discomfort?

Richard Baker-Roshi, the Abbot at San Francisco Zen Center when I began my practice there, once asked me to attend a function with him. I knew I would encounter people there I did not like and so I demurred, saying that I would be “uncomfortable” in that situation. His immediate response was, “What’s wrong with being uncomfortable?” His answer indicated a door for me to consider. “Who” had made that decision, and why had my discomfort been suddenly elevated to the highest priority?

If your normal posture and social strategy represents a desire “not to be noticed,” being compelled to behave boldly or aggressively will awaken a host of resistances, worries, and previously rejected feelings. If you fear that spontaneous responses might expose you as foolish, reveal unconscious baggage, or that being out-of-control frightens you, these exercises will have revelatory value for you. They may initially feel off-task or trivial, but they’re extremely practical for highlighting aspects of the self we normally consign to invisibility.

The more familiar you are with your habits and partialities, the more easily you can alter them. These exercises address the unconscious directly, feeding it new information and strange associations which nudge it off balance and onto high alert. It is that high-alert state seeking normalcy, which, when presented with the unknown mask, scrambles to assemble a new coherent personality that matches associations with the face in the mirror.

In each class, after a morning’s exercises and games, the masks are introduced. The masks are neutral masks which do not express any particular emotion. However, there is a definite quality to their neutrality, a tabula rasa which allows maximal space for the wearer (and audience) to “read-in” qualities. This blankness makes them mutable, so that each person’s body and head-shape alters the mask’s emotional tone. A mask which appears docile and defeated on one person, appears edgy and sullen on another, seductive or provocative on a third. It is their “emptiness” of qualities which facilitates these transformations. Some masks “work” and others do not and it’s hard to determine which will work at first look. One of my favorite masks is a stamped, nearly featureless plastic face that cost a dollar. It has enormous eye holes, but somehow always transforms the wearer by bringing forth a very clear personality.

For Buddhists, it is the “emptiness” (formlessness) at the root of all things which accounts for the worlds’ infinite variety of forms. If emptiness had any fixed qualities there would be things it could not express. In mask-work, that emptiness is the vacuum the mind abhors and rushes to fill in with data.

Class always opens with some minutes of meditation. After that, the best part of the morning session is dedicated to exercises and games. When it feels right, we meet the masks. Students are called up in groups of three to five. They are instructed to turn their backs to the class, and I stand before them holding an 18-inch square mirror close to their faces. As they slip on a mask and arrange their hair over its edges I encourage them to alter the angle of their head--tilting one way or another, looking up from under their brows or down their nose, widening or narrowing their eyes, regarding the mirror obliquely--until something “clicks.” When that occurs, they nod to indicate that they’ve “got it.” I remind them that if they begin to lose the new identity, simply call out “Mirror” and I’ll return so they can reconnect to it.

When you see a mask as your reflection, several things occur simultaneously. A face which is not your own offers feedback to the mind. Seeking order and coherence, the mind mines its resources, scavenging clues, previously stored images from fantasy and dreams to re-establish a new equilibrium. From that plunge into interior space, awareness rag-picks among random memories, feelings, observations, and emotions to assemble a holographic new personality. The new identity is as multi-dimensional as the old and will include knowledge of the masked persona’s personal history, relatives, posture, attitudes toward the world, and pungent biographical details. It is as if everything you know about yourself can be transformed into a door through which to discover someone else.

While your familiar identity remains in suspension, it will not trip you up with judgments, criticism, self-consciousness, and embarrassment. All its constituent parts that normally cause you difficulty are subdued. This occurs in the blink of an eye, and to anyone who has ever experienced the shock of recognition of a new character arising in their interior, it feels miraculous, as if that person had always been resident in your interior shadows like an understudy waiting their opportunity to claim the stage.

Masks obliterate the gap between the self and the self-that-watches-the-self by temporarily repressing the ego. What’s key is that our attachment to our own identity is sufficiently softened, so that the mask is able to redirect previously dedicated energy into a new identity.

Because of the playful context, and because the self has been “messed with” in a convivial, risk-free environment, masks displace normal fears of “surrender” that might accompany “losing our grip” in front of strangers. This softened attachment allows us to slip the ego’s dominance temporarily and our escape also releases us from our personality’s historical problems. The startling and novel feedback of an unrecognizable face in the mirror offers consciousness new data points on which to fix its predictive functions. This “new face” provokes new associations which are absorbed into the trance-state induced by the mask.

The mask’s persona perceives differently than “you” do and seizes possibilities that our ordinary self has excluded from its options. The masked persona responds to challenges or surprises with aplomb, rises to unexpected questions without hesitation or embarrassment, and usually with glee and pronounced “attitude.” The responses are ego-free or more accurate, represent the ego of the mask, not your own. Furthermore, no matter how diffidently or unsure a student may have been at the beginning of class, once masked, they stand before their peers as radically different people. Some will be insanely aggressive, others smoldering and cocksure, others barking mad, or perfectly normal but someone other than who they were when they entered class that day.

Masks are doorways into altered states, and in those states the rigid boundaries of our old identity become permeable. In order to give ourselves permission to enter such states we may need to face fears that “losing control” might expose us in some embarrassing manner or stain our reputations. Avoiding such thought-traps is exactly why we wear masks! We may often censor behavior, but we needn’t censor our imaginations, and in a mask, the imagination is given free rein.

With the new identity secured, players turn around to face the class. I conduct short interviews with each as an introduction to the class. Invariably, these new personalities appear fully formed, completely conversant with facts about their family history, siblings, biographies of parents, and reasons for being there, which, moments earlier, did not exist. Their attitudes are markedly different and their sense of improvisation markedly more committed and skillful. The delineations of character are very clear, and mask-wearers are often surprised to find themselves funnier, sharper, more intelligent, or responsive than they were before putting on the mask

About The Author

Peter Coyote is an award-winning actor, author, director, screenwriter, and narrator who has worked with some of the world’s most distinguished filmmakers. Recognized for his narration work, he narrated the PBS series The Pacific Century, winning an Emmy award, as well as eight Ken Burns documentaries, including The Roosevelts, for which he won a second Emmy. In 2011 he was ordained as a Zen Buddhist priest and in 2015 received “transmission” from his teacher, making him an independent Zen teacher. The author of several books, he lives in northern California.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Inner Traditions (December 14, 2021)
  • Length: 192 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781644113578

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Raves and Reviews

“Remembering that a neutral mask class in college was one of the few acting exercises I found really useful, I was curious to see how an accomplished actor like Peter Coyote would tie mask work to the tenets of Buddhist philosophy. Through the lens of the Lone Ranger and Tonto, Coyote cleverly conveys the message of finding oneself by losing oneself. I highly recommend this book to every actor--veteran or fledgling--indeed to every human who has ever felt constrained by the voices of self-criticism in their head.”

– Jean Smart, Emmy Award-winning actor

“This pithy book is flat-out brilliant. It weaves together deep Buddhist teaching, the magic of improv and mask work, and a compelling dialogue between three iconic characters, each of whom represent an aspect of the spiritual path. Only Peter Coyote in all his facets and talents could have written this book. I’m glad he did.”

– Lewis Richmond, author of Aging as a Spiritual Practice

“In a world full of ideas about getting the advantage, gaining the edge or greater power, and improving your position or standing, it is so utterly refreshing to have a master speak of liberation from our long-standing ego conundrums to acknowledge and invite energy from the beyond to flow through, shape, and inform our thoughts, action, and speech. Story, masks, meditation--by all means--you are you before you have a thought, and you have the freedom to manifest the person, to wear the mask, of your choosing. Go ahead! Drop the striving and have some fun with this play of language brought forth by the wily Coyote.”

– Edward Espe Brown, Zen priest and author of The Tassajara Bread Book

“In The Lone Ranger and Tonto Meet Buddha, I spent time not just with masks but with the craft of masking as a method of becoming more awake. I entered mask classes and met not only the teacher and the teaching but the students and what they were getting out of it. In this book are solid Buddhist commentary, intriguing story, and from that mix, I sense an emerging American discipline that unites theater and dharma--the Way of the Mask.”

– David Chadwick, author of Crooked Cucumber: The Life and Zen Teaching of Shunryu Suzuki

“In this wild and wonderful book, Coyote weaves together his practices of Zen Buddhism and meditation with his experiences in theater and film, and as a well-known narrator of documentary drama. In the process, he teaches us how to put on and take off all our masks. The outcome is a bunch of fresh new techniques of exploring and gaining freedom from the suffering of a separate self. I encourage you to go on this spiritual journey with Coyote. It is a path true to the great tradition of ‘crazy wisdom.’ And this is the last self-help book you’ll ever need.”

– Wes Scoop Nisker, author of The Essential Crazy Wisdom and Buddha’s Nature

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