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365 days, 365 doodles

Updated on: 16 May,2021 10:16 AM IST  |  New Hampshire
Agencies |

American senior spent a whole year doodling for his daughter

365 days, 365 doodles

Robert Seaman in his room, completing one of his doodles. Pics/AP

Artist Robert Seaman, 88, has been drawing since he was a boy, but it took the Coronavirus pandemic to fully return him to his passion. Last week marked one year since Seaman started churning out “daily doodles” from his small, one-room apartment at the Maplewood Assisted Living facility in Westmoreland, New Hampshire.


Seaman, 88, spent the entire year of the pandemic doodling
Seaman, 88, spent the entire year of the pandemic doodling


“As a kid, I kept lurching between being a loner and being an extrovert,” he said. “But in my introvert phase, I would love to go up to my room, where I had a drawing table kind of desk and I’d spend hours up there drawing pictures. That’s what I’m doing now.”


Robert Seaman flaunting his last doodle for the year
Robert Seaman flaunting his last doodle for the year

He spends about six hours a day working on his intricate, fanciful illustrations. Seaman moved into Maplewood just two weeks before the pandemic restrictions cut residents off from the outside world. For many months, they couldn’t leave their rooms. “The first thought I had was to just do some kind of dark stuff that reflected the nature of the confinement that we were experiencing,” he said.

Seaman’s 356th  doodle
Seaman’s 356th  doodle

“Then it just started to grow, and I thought it would be interesting to do one a day.” Some pieces showcase his fascination with science fiction, while others portray whimsical animals or sly humor. He started sending the doodles to his daughter, Robin Hayes. Hayes then began offering the originals and prints for sale on Etsy.com, with half the proceeds going to charities, including a Covid-19 relief fund, a homeless shelter and an organis-ation that helps refugees.

Lake Placid 2.0

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Shoes that can see

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Aussie lady speaks Irish after throat surgery

An Australian, Angela Yen, 27, had a tonsillectomy on April 19 and was confused when her Aussie accent turned into an Irish brogue 10 days after the procedure. Experts said that Yen may have foreign accent syndrome, a rare speech disorder.

Woman robs banks to pay for plastic surgery

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Runaway bride

Clinical therapist to run across the state of New York to raise awareness about narcissistic domestic abuse

Vanessa Reiser, a 47-year-old clinical therapist from Rockland County, New York, will be running 285 miles across the state of New York over the course of 12 days, starting from May 17—in her wedding dress, which is a way to raise awareness about narcissistic domestic abuse, something she has experienced herself. “The narcissist uses this as a way to entangle people,” says Reiser. To prepare, she’s done long runs of 30 and 40 miles on some weekends or four back-to-back days of 20-mile runs on other weeks. Reiser herself was engaged to a diagnosed narcissist and sociopath. Several months later, in March of last year, she decided to leave him. In response, her fiancé tried to get her kicked off the board of the Centre for Safety and Change, a local domestic violence centre. Though she was unemployed when she left that relationship, Reiser went on to start a nonprofit called Tell A Therapist, which helps victims of narcissistic abuse.

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