It was a rare occasion  when the Pandava brothers fought amongst each other. It began when  Arjuna claimed that his weapon, the bow, was the most sophisticated  weapon in the world. Bhima argued that it was his weapon, the mace,  which was the most sophisticated. Yudhishtira joined in; he felt his  weapon, the spear, was the best weapon created by the gods. Finally, the  twins, Nakula and Sahadeva, had their say: the sword they said was the  ultimate weapon. The arguments went on for days and nights, each brother  defending his weapon passionately. Their teacher, Drona, watched in  bewilderment.         
        
         When all the brothers  were exhausted from not being able to convince others, they turned to  their teacher and asked him to act as judge. “The contest reveals  nothing about the weapons but it does reveal a lot about you. You are  claiming what is best for you is best for the world. You are turning  subjective reality into objective reality.”         
          Arjuna was good with the bow and so became a great archer. That does not  make the bow the greatest weapon in the world. Bhima was good with the  mace and so became a great mace-warrior. That does not make the mace the  best weapon in the world. Each one was presenting their natural  strength as an objective choice. They were functioning in hindsight – a  mistake that is commonly made in companies.         
        
          Yogesh and Shailesh were having a fight. They were childhood  friends. Yogesh worked in a multinational company and had done very  well, rising to the rank of a director. Shailesh had started his own  business and it had done very well. Yogesh felt that working in a  multinational company is the best thing in the world. Shailesh felt  running one’s own business is the best thing in the world. Each one  argued his case logically without realising that neither possessed the  other’s          skill sets          .         
        
          Had Yogesh started a business, it would have in all likelihood  failed and Shailesh would have not survived a day working in another  man’s organisation. Yogesh was great at working in an organisation and  getting people to follow processes, while Shailesh was great working on  his own and leading people independently. Each one was presenting his  natural strengths as a rational choice. They were making these claims  post-facto (after the success) but declaring it to be pre-facto  (decisions taken before success).         
        
          During recruitment, young interns are placed in various departments and  each departmental head declares their department to be the best  department. Few sit back to wonder, is it good for the intern? Does he  have the attitude and the          aptitude          for that  department? Are we unknowingly putting the bow in Bhima’s hand and the  mace in Arjuna’s? That would not lead to success.          
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