NYAC | 3min Read

The Blank Canvas

Published on May 7, 2026

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The Blank Canvas

The Blank Canvas

“Sometime the expression of inner turmoil &

shrieks is…silence”

The power cut was sudden. Above, the ceiling fan

began to slow with a cranky groan, its blades dragging

against the humid air just as the rhythm had died in

Nirav’s own mind, leaving no resonance between him and

his consciousness. Out of a billion glowing windows in

the city, his was the only one where the light didn’t just

flicker—it faded. Nirav Jain was losing a wealth no bank

could hold: the raw thoughts born from a past of too

much comprehension. He wasn’t just a fifteen-year-old

boy in a dark room; he was a painter whose colours had

finally turned to white, mirroring the blank canvas beside

him that held no sign of paint.

Nirav stared from the window, watching the chaos

of traffic—a thunderous surge of cars rustling for

position like scarab beetles. Even with the uncertainty in

the sky, the darkness of the night was engulfing the

sun’s radiance, mirroring how Nirav was introspecting

within his own character, seeking his true self in the

withered darkness of loss. The weather grew

unpredictable; a sudden, violent gust caught the frame,

slamming the window shut with a crack that echoed like

a gunshot in the hollow room. Nirav hardly heard it, lost

deep in a trance. He dwelled within an abstract world

that was full yet blurred, difficult to comprehend, yetrecognizable to him with a hurtful clarity. His pain was

not about the death of a loved one, nor any stereotypical

teenage drama caused by peer pressure or bullying.

The paintbrush, forbidden by the bonds of his

principles, sat isolated in a corner beside a canvas

exposing a silent act of murder: a chaotic splash of cobalt

blue and a rain of red strokes falling from the firmament,

touching the foundation. This was the painting he had

finished a month ago, surrendering his entire memoir

into the bristles. The work seemed to stare back at him,

forcing him to recall mistakes that had never even taken

place. It was an act of self-sabotage, where his outdated,

orthodox principles were hacking away at an unleashed

creativity that screamed to be showcased rather than

enclosed.

Outside his door, Mr. and Mrs. Jain—his

“guardian angels”—were busy with their own errands.

Nirav always wore a mask of smiles that tricked them all,

yet his inner turmoil remained visible in his art. His

hidden self was confined to that room with the door

closed; elsewhere, everything was a familiar routine. His

mother, who never failed to understand her child, had

failed this time. Both parents were perfect in their own

spheres, providing him with whatever he wanted, yet

Nirav kept himself in a pitch-dark, confined cell,

convinced the world was too toxic to appreciate his

unidentified thoughts. Because he believed his conflictwas beyond their scope of comprehension, the only

witness to his turmoil was his painting.

Unknowingly, he stood up and marched with

determination toward the blank canvas, resolved to

create a masterpiece by pouring out his pent-up

emotions. Suddenly, the room lit up. The fan began

spinning again with its original velocity, dragging Nirav

back to the persona he never truly was. His mind fell

silent, and his painting followed suit. Yet his internal

conscience continued making noise—more disturbing

than the traffic outside. The room became his mind and

Nirav became his thoughts; he lay back on his bed beside

the canvas, which remained blank, unlike his mind,

which roared with turmoil.

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