TLDR: Alan Watts examines the nature of social roles and how we unconsciously merge our sense of self with the characters we perform in society. Rather than viewing roles as mere masks we can take off, Watts suggests that understanding roleplay reveals something fundamental about consciousness itself—that we are not fixed entities but fluid expressions of awareness temporarily identified with particular functions, positions, and personalities. The confusion arises when we forget we are playing the role and believe we ARE the role. This insight opens a pathway to freedom: when we recognize the performance, we regain agency and can move through life with greater ease and authenticity.
What Does It Mean to "Play a Role" in Society?
In ordinary language, we often speak of roles metaphorically—the role of a parent, a professional, a friend. But Watts pushes deeper into what this actually means ontologically. A role is not simply a job description or social position; it is a pattern of behavior, speech, and emotional response that we have adopted and now defend as identity. When you say "I am a teacher" or "I am a doctor," you are conflating a function with your fundamental being.
Watts invites us to observe this mechanism directly. Notice how differently you behave depending on context: with your boss, with your children, with your closest confidant. You are not consciously shifting strategies each time; rather, you are inhabiting different roles, each with its own set of approved behaviors and forbidden ones. The role comes with a script—often unwritten—that governs what you can say, what emotions are appropriate, and even how you should think about yourself.
The problem deepens when we become so identified with these roles that we lose sight of the fact that they are performances. We begin to believe that the role is who we really are. A corporate executive might genuinely feel that their worth as a human being depends on their professional success, because they have unconsciously merged their identity with their role. The role has become the person.
How Does Role-Playing Create a False Self?
Watts distinguishes between the function you perform and the consciousness that performs it. Your role—whatever it may be—serves a social function. It allows society to organize itself and for individuals to cooperate effectively. But this functional necessity does not mean the role constitutes your essential nature.
When we identify with our roles, we create what might be called a false self: a constructed identity that feels real because we have invested so much time and emotion into maintaining it. This false self has vulnerabilities built into it. It must be constantly defended, improved, and justified. You worry about how others perceive you in your role because you believe your worth rides on your performance. Your ego becomes attached to the role's success or failure.
The tragedy, from Watts' perspective, is that beneath all these roles there is a deeper consciousness—an awareness that is not bound by function or position. But we rarely access this awareness because we are so thoroughly identified with the performance. We mistake the mask for the face.
This false self also creates what Watts calls a fundamental isolation. Because you are defending a constructed identity rather than being genuine, you cannot truly connect with others who are also defending their constructed identities. You are two roles interacting, not two whole beings encountering one another. Real intimacy becomes difficult because vulnerability—which would expose the constructed nature of the self—feels dangerous to the role-identity.
Why Do We Forget We Are Playing a Role?
The most insidious aspect of roleplay is that we forget we are doing it. This forgetting is not accidental; it is structural to how roles work. If you were constantly aware that you were acting, the role would lose its effectiveness. To play a character convincingly, you must inhabit it, believe it, at least while you are in the role. Method actors understand this principle: to portray a character authentically, you don't perform the role from outside; you become it temporarily from within.
Society reinforces this forgetting. From childhood, you are rewarded for playing your assigned roles well and punished for breaking character. You internalize the role until it feels natural, spontaneous, genuine. By adulthood, the role is so seamless that you cannot distinguish between the person playing the role and the role itself. The two have merged.
Watts suggests that part of our difficulty in modern life stems from this collapsed distinction. We have become our roles so completely that when we are off-duty—on vacation, alone in the house—we feel empty, anxious, or bored. Without the role to inhabit, who are we? This is not a rhetorical question; it is an acute existential crisis for many people whose entire sense of self has been outsourced to a function.
Can We Recognize the Performance Without Abandoning Our Responsibilities?
A common misunderstanding of Watts' teaching is that recognizing the artificial nature of roles means we should abandon them, become irresponsible, or adopt a pose of detached cynicism. This is precisely backwards. Watts' point is that we can perform our roles more effectively and with less suffering when we remember that we are performing them.
Consider a skilled actor. An actor who knows they are playing King Lear is not less committed to the role; they are more committed, because they are not defending their ego against criticism of the king. If someone says the king is foolish or makes poor decisions, the actor is not threatened because they know they are not the king. This paradoxically allows the actor to inhabit the role more fully and authentically.
The same applies to your social roles. A parent who remembers that they are playing the role of parent—rather than believing they ARE a parent in some essential way—can be a more responsive, creative, and present parent. They are not defending an identity; they are engaged in a function. A professional who remembers that their job is a role can do better work because they are not unconsciously driven by ego-anxiety. They can make decisions based on what is needed rather than what will enhance their status or prove their worth.
Watts is not arguing for detachment or irresponsibility. He is arguing for what might be called "conscious roleplay"—the ability to inhabit your roles fully while remaining aware that you are inhabiting them. This is the essence of playfulness, in the deepest sense. A child playing a game is fully engaged in the game, yet the child also knows it is a game. That dual awareness is what makes play joyful rather than anxious.
What Happens When We Become Conscious of Roleplay?
When you begin to notice that you are playing roles—when you catch yourself mid-performance and recognize the script you are following—something shifts. This recognition is not intellectual alone; it requires a actual shift in consciousness, a stepping back from identification with the role. For a moment, you experience yourself not as the role but as the awareness in which the role is occurring.
This is profoundly liberating because it opens up freedom. If you are not identical with the role, then you can choose how to play it. You can modulate your performance, respond creatively to situations rather than reacting automatically according to the script. You can even refuse to play the role in a given moment, though you may accept the consequences of doing so.
Moreover, recognition of roleplay creates compassion. When you see clearly that others are also playing roles—defending false selves, following scripts they have internalized since childhood—you naturally feel less hostile toward them. Their defensive behaviors, their egoic reactions, their insecurities become understandable as the inevitable results of role-identification. You stop taking their behavior personally, which paradoxically allows for more genuine connection.
Watts also suggests that this recognition touches something deeper: the realization that consciousness itself is not what we thought it was. If consciousness can observe the role while being identified with it, what is consciousness? It cannot be the role, because roles are temporary and consciousness seems continuous. Yet consciousness cannot be entirely separate from the role, because without consciousness there would be no one to play it. This paradox points toward a more holistic understanding of self and awareness that transcends the subject-object split embedded in role-consciousness.
How Does This Apply to Modern Life?
In contemporary culture, the pressures to remain identified with roles are intense. Professional identity has become central to how people define themselves and their worth. Social media has amplified the demand to perform roles publicly and continuously. The line between "on stage" and "off stage" has collapsed; you are always potentially performing for an audience, which means you are always at risk of losing sight of the performance.
Watts' teaching becomes especially relevant in this context. The anxiety, burnout, and sense of fraudulence many people experience in their professional and social lives may stem partly from this very mechanism: total identification with a role that is inherently unstable and constantly under scrutiny. A financial advisor who believes they ARE a financial advisor has staked their entire sense of self on the success of that role. When the market crashes or a client is disappointed, it is not just a professional failure; it is existential failure. This is why people in high-status roles often report feeling like impostors—because somewhere deep down, they intuitively sense the gap between the role and the being who is playing it.
The antidote is not to abandon the role but to remember the player. This does not mean becoming passive or irresponsible. It means recovering agency, creativity, and presence. It means being able to discharge your duties with full attention and care while remaining inwardly free from the need to prove your worth through the role.
Where to Go From Here
To begin exploring this teaching in your own life, start with observation. Notice the roles you are playing at any given moment. Watch how your speech, posture, and emotional tone shift depending on context. Do not judge this shifting; it is natural and necessary. Instead, simply develop awareness of it. Can you catch the moment when you shift into a role? Can you feel the identification taking place?
As you develop this observational capacity, experiment with conscious roleplay. Choose one role you play regularly—a professional role, a family role, a social role—and practice inhabiting it while remaining aware that you are inhabiting it. Notice what changes. Does the role feel less burdensome? Are you more creative in handling challenges within the role? Do you feel less defensive?
Finally, consider who or what is doing the observing. When you step back from a role and watch yourself play it, what is that awareness? Is it another role, or is it something else entirely? Exploring this question deeply leads into the heart of contemplative practice and the liberating insight that consciousness is not bound by the roles it temporarily inhabits.



