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New Yorkers Dismayed At Election Results Can Seek Out 'Subway Therapy'

New Yorkers Dismayed At Election Results Can Seek Out 'Subway Therapy'
New York City skyline with illuminated skyscrapers seen from above during sunrise, New York State, USA
Alexander Spatari via Getty Images
New York City skyline with illuminated skyscrapers seen from above during sunrise, New York State, USA

Hundreds left pastel-colored Post-it notes on the wall of a New York City subway stop on Wednesday, hours after Donald Trump was elected president.

Artist Levee started the project, known as “Subway Therapy,” before Tuesday’s election, and has held sessions all over town. While he’s not a licensed therapist, Levee’s goal is to make people smile, laugh and feel less stressed.

Typically he would set up shop with a table and two chairs, but he told ABC News that Wednesday’s version was like a special election edition, given how intense the contest had become and the toll it had taken on voters.

“Because of how stressful the last couple of days were, I thought it would be nice to have something that people could do really quickly so they could maybe get something off their chest,” Levee told ABC News.

So he gathered Post-it and pens in the underpass between the 1 train and the L at the 14th Street stop. He invited commuters to write a question or share a sentiment on the results.

Levee said that 1,500 notes were left on the wall. Messages ranged from providing comforting thoughts to expressing concern and disillusionment.

“I provided the materials, but the people of New York provided the courage and candor in the face of crippling division,” he said in a post on his website.

Levee told The Huffington Post that he would head to the same spot on Thursday and Friday, though time and location details had yet to be confirmed.

To find out more, you can follow him on Instagram and learn more about the project here.

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