PHOTOS: People Are Drawing Inspiring Messages All Over the Place

FILE - In this Tuesday, April 14, 2020 file photo, a mural reads "Stay Home, Life is Beautiful' in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

By Associated Press

April 25, 2020

Some message offer encouragement, while others are funny. Then there are the rainbows. So many rainbows.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Inspiration is contagious, too.

The coronavirus pandemic has brought an outpouring of messages from stranger to stranger — in windows, on front doors, across walls, and colored onto driveways and sidewalks.

Some messages offer encouragement: “Strong Together.” “Always Look at the Bright Side of Life.”

Others are spiritual: “Have Faith.” “Jesus Loves You Always.”

In this Monday, March 30, 2020 file photo, Layne Bjornseth, left, and her boyfriend Ben Glover touch up a street mural with chalk off Southampton Court in Decatur, Ala. (Dan Busey/The Decatur Daily via AP, File)

Some offer humor: “United We Stand — 6 Feet Apart.” “Send Toilet Paper!”

And there are rainbows. So many rainbows.

In Covington, Kentucky, 16-year-old twins Mallory and Kelly Glynn were toying around with colored chalk on their driveway, waiting for an idea.

“I saw all the chalk art people were creating all over social media and wanted to give it a shot, but wasn’t sure what to draw,” Mallory said by text message. She was checking Instagram and saw a chalk message on the page of Allie Clifton, who played basketball at University of Toledo and is a TV sportscaster in Los Angeles. It said: “April Distance Brings May Existence.”

Mallory drew a map of Kentucky with that message below it, followed by hashtags: “TeamKy” and “TogetherKY.” Soon, people were stopping to snap cellphone photos of it to share with their friends. Neighbors smiled.
“I think it brightened their day just a little bit,” Mallory said.

In Homewood, Alabama, professional sign painter Shawn Fitzwater wanted to use his talents to lift spirits, and spent 10 hours covering a building wall with “We Are All In This Together.”

AP Photo/Jay Reeves

People were soon parking across the street from the sign to take photos and post them on social media, and an apparel company owned by friends put Fitzwater’s message on a T-shirt. Shirts were sold to raise money for BHMcares, a startup nonprofit group that’s assisting health care workers by providing them with meals purchased from struggling local restaurants.

“It’s kind of turned into something bigger than I ever expected,” he said.

The mayor of Dayton, Ohio, saw countless DaytonStrong messages during a turbulent 2019 in which the city endured a tense Ku Klux Klan rally, devastating tornadoes, a mass shooting in which 10 people died, and the fatal shooting of a police detective.

Nan Whaley said the slogans “Dayton United Against Hate” and “DaytonStrong” were more planned and organized than the personalized messages she’s seen that seem to be sprouting nearly spontaneously, such as “Hope Will Arise” in chalk and a window rainbow with “God Is In Control.”
“These are deeper, reaching out for connectivity,” Whaley said.

“This thing is particularly lonely and so it’s almost a shout of ‘Look, I’m putting myself out here and that makes me connected, and someone else will stumble upon it, and it will be meaningful to them.’

A pedestrian walks past artwork painted on plywood covering a business closed during the coronavirus outbreak in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)
A roadway sign reads “THIS TOO SHALL PASS” as cars pass the entrance leading to the Encore Boston casino in Everett, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
A thank you note hangs in the kitchen of the Prairie Queen Elementary School in Oklahoma City as lunches and instructional packets are distributed. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
Sam Mawhinney does his best to bring a moments of joy to motorists as spreads his message of love while walking in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
The Apollo Theater carries the message “Be Well” in the Harlem neighborhood of New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
A pedestrian wearing personal protective equipment to protect against the spread of coronavirus, passes EMS station 26, the Tinhouse” Thursday, April 23, 2020 in the Bronx borough of New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
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