Dear Pravin,
   
  What works for two black pebbles in a bag will possibly work for the other 
colours , too! ;-)
   
  Perhaps, we can do the same with the Moneybags that want to rape pretty Goa 
... from literal thinking to lateral thinking is one helluva step forward!
   
  Mog asundi,
   
  Miguel

Pravin Sabnis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
     
  MONDAY MUSE (9 June 2008)
   
  TWO PEBBLES
   
  A farmer owed a huge sum of money to a village moneylender. The ageing 
moneylender, who fancied the farmer's daughter offered to forgo the farmer's 
debt if he could marry his daughter. However, the cunning money-lender made it 
look like a fair deal. He told them that he would put a black and a white 
pebble into an empty money bag. If the girl picked the black pebble, she would 
have to marry him and if she picked the white pebble she need not marry him.
   
  The moneylender picked up two pebbles from the pebble strewn path. As he 
picked them up, the sharp-eyed girl noticed that he had picked up two black 
pebbles and put them into the bag. He then asked the girl to pick a pebble from 
the bag. It seemed like an impossible situation for the young girl.
   
  The girl intentionally fumbled while drawing out a pebble from the moneybag 
and let it fall and be lost on the pebble-strewn path. "Sorry," she said. "But 
never mind, if you look at the one left in the bag, you will know which pebble 
I picked." Since the remaining pebble is black, it had to be assumed that she 
had picked the white one. And since the money-lender dared not admit his 
dishonesty, the girl changed what seemed an impossible situation into an 
extremely advantageous one. 
   
  This story seeks to make us appreciate the difference between lateral and 
logical thinking. The girl's dilemma could not have been solved with 
traditional logical thinking. Most complex problems do have a solution. It is 
only that we don't attempt to think. To be better at handling difficult 
situations, we need to think out of the box.
   
  The limited choices we see may not all that be
  to BE BETTER at solutions, set your thinking free  
   
  - Pravin-da
  9 June 2008, Goa, India.
   
  Since 2004, the MONDAY MUSE series (based on JCI-India's annual theme) is 
penned by PRAVIN SABNIS - a life coach with a passion to connect people to 
their passion & potential. He employs creative competencies in theatre & 
trekking in his UNLEARNING UNLIMITED workshops conducted for leading corporate 
& other groups. 
   


-- 
Pravin K. Sabnis (cell: 9422640141)
visit: www.unlearningunlimited.blogspot.com
www.mondaymuse.blogspot.com
www.poems-pravinsabnis.blogspot.com
www.amkanakasez.blogspot.com
www.ganv-ghor.blogspot.com 



       
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