"Health Is Not a Clean Canvas" explores health and illness as a complex, layered experience of physical, emotional, and social intersections. The metaphor of a "canvas" is central: it represents the body and the lived experience of health as never uniform, but shaped by each person's unique history, context, and interventions. The first stanza emphasizes embodied experience, portraying illness and vulnerability as unavoidable stains and textures on the canvas, reflecting the physical and psychological impact of disease. The second stanza brings in the interpersonal and professional dimension of care, depicting healthcare providers as contributing both structure and color, yet acknowledging the limitations of clinical intervention in fully capturing the patient's lived experience. Imagery of ink, roots, and corridors conveys the interconnectedness of human care and the organic, sometimes unpredictable growth of healing. The final stanza foregrounds the arts as a complementary medium for health, showing how music, clay, laughter, and creative acts help patients reclaim agency, express emotion, and experience wellbeing. By framing recovery and health as co-constructed, aesthetic, and embodied, the poem aligns with arts-in-health discourse, highlighting the transformative potential of creative engagement alongside conventional healthcare. The use of strong visual and tactile imagery is intended to evoke both emotional resonance and reflective insight, making it accessible to a broad readership, including healthcare practitioners, artists, researchers, and policy makers. The piece, therefore, asserts that health is not about perfection, but about the ongoing, imperfect, and meaningful process of creating, enduring, and healing within the textured canvas of human life.
Awu Isaac Oben (Thu,) studied this question.