When the Zebra Turns the Question: What Shel Silverstein Teaches Us About Seeing Ourselves
What if every question we ask about others is really a mirror reflecting back something about ourselves? Shel Silverstein’s playful zebra reminds us that curiosity can lead not just outward—but inward.
Zebra Questions
Shel Silverstein
I asked the zebra
Are you black with white stripes?
Or white with black stripes?
And the zebra asked me,
Or you good with bad habits?
Or are you bad with good habits?
Are you noisy with quiet times?
Or are you quiet with noisy times?
Are you happy with some sad days?
Or are you sad with some happy days?
Are you neat with some sloppy ways?
Or are you sloppy with some neat ways?
And on and on and on and on
And on and on he went.
I’ll never ask a zebra
About stripes
Again.
Reflection
Shel Silverstein’s “Zebra Questions” begins as a lighthearted riddle about stripes—but ends as a lesson in perspective. The moment the zebra turns the question around, we are reminded that the way we see the world often reveals more about us than about others. Are we quick to categorize, to label, to divide the world into black and white? Or are we willing to accept that truth—and people—often live in the gray in-between?
The zebra’s wisdom lies in its humor. Life, like the zebra, is both-and, not either-or. We are good and flawed, joyful and sad, neat and messy, sometimes all in the same breath. By laughing at ourselves through Silverstein’s words, we’re invited to embrace our contradictions, to be curious about who we are beneath the stripes.
Question for Readers:
When life challenges you to define yourself, do you see your “stripes” as limits—or as the beautiful blend of contrasts that make you whole?