This morning I was walking from home to the studio--not the usual studio I teach at but the one on nearer my house, where I was subbing a class--and I walked through the park and toward the bridge that crosses over the river. As I approached, I noticed a man standing in the middle of the bridge, looking intently over the railing at the water below. As I drew nearer, the man looked at me, eyes wide, and said, "There is a large beaver down there with a large stick. He just went under the bridge. But if you wait and look over the other side," he said, pointing toward the opposite railing, "you might see him come out from beneath the bridge." And then he walked away and left me on the bridge by myself. I decided to trust that the man was telling the truth because I wanted to see a beaver. If he was lying, all I'd lose was a couple seconds of my time, and also getting to see a beaver. It seemed like a small investment for a large possible payoff. So I went over to the opposite railing and looked over, down at the water, and there was nothing there but a bunch of water rushing out from under the bridge toward some rocks, over which the water tumbled and churned. And then I saw a big fat beaver come slowly lazily out from under the bridge and paddle toward the rocks. It was carrying in its mouth one end of a long, thin stick, maybe an inch thick, while the other end trailed along beside and behind it. It's fur was a reddish brown and kind of matted with water, and its tail was long wide flat and leathery behind it. I rarely get to see a beaver, and I was very happy that the man shared the existance of this one with me. It would otherwise have been beneath the bridge as I crossed over it, and I'd have never seen it. I felt obligated to share the beaver with somebody else, with the next person to cross the bridge, and so I waited, watching the beaver clamber up onto the wet rocks. Soon, somebody started crossing the bridge toward me, and when they were close enough, I pointed and told them, "There's a big beaver down there with a stick," and they stopped and looked down over the side of the bridge and they saw the beaver and smiled, and I walked away, having passed the torch to them. Now they were enjoying the sight of the beaver, and soon somebody else would come, and they'll tell that person about the beaver too, in this way keeping the chain going. And I felt part of a community, of a secret Beaver Sighting Society. A society with simple rules and simpler secrets, founded on a progression, a passing of ownership, not of the beaver, for none of us could own the beaver. Such a thing can never be possible and should never be considered. But we each of us owned *looking at the beaver* for a short while, alone and quite and smiling on the bridge, until the next one should come along, and at such a time it is the newcomer's turn to own looking at the beaver and the original person's turn to leave them. As I continued to the studio, I reflected on how the whole ordeal from start to finish probably only took 60 - 90 seconds. It required of me but a little bit of trust and curiosity, and left me with a feeling of wonder and belonging.