Help.

You know that scene from How To Be Single in which Dakota Johnson’s character struggles to unzip her own dress? It’s a very relatable moment for any gal who’s recently broke up with her boyfriend, or for anyone who lives alone.

Even if you haven’t “scene” it, I bet you can still empathize with feeling this inconvenience when it comes to being single and having to power through simple tasks without assistance, like unzipping your own dress.

That’s practically all I’ve ever known, and even though I’ve gotten used to doing it by myself, I still get excited when I have moments in which I can zip myself up without assistance.

Take this morning.

After struggling heavily with some clasps on my vintage bracelets, I finally got the hooks in the eyes and reveled in the satisfaction of doing it without the help of friends, family, roommates, or my non-existent boyfriend.

It was even more invigorating when I swam through the straps and zips on my wiggle dress, which was an absolute maze to get through.

So I’m at work, pink power lips pouting and spicy summer dress hugging all the right places, and as I’m confidently walking about, I take a quick bathroom break only to run into the inevitable disaster that comes with all days that seem to be going too smoothly.

My zipper breaks.

Remember those “hugging all the right places” remarks about my dress? Well it seems my dress was hugging all the right places just a little too much and as I was sliding the dress back down my hips, the zipper goes pop and the whole backside erupts out of my dress.

One thing about this dress: the zipper goes up the entire length of the back of the dress. So when the zipper breaks, there’s nothing else holding the pieces together, leaving my rear end bare like a patient in a hospital gown.

Of course this would happen in my single girl power story.

Naked in the bathroom, I timidly opened the door and finally called for help.

“Help! Pssssst I need help!” I called out to my brother, who flagged down my mom.

After enlisting the help of both her and my friend Hayley, I cover up and bound across the parking lot to get more assistance from my sister, who successfully manages to secure my zipper for the rest of my brunch shift.

It unzipped twice more, luckily not in the presence of leading guests upstairs (wouldn’t that have been a memorable visit?), and at the end of the day, I had a very different opinion of being a defiant independent woman who don’t need no man.

See, whilst being single is empowering, it can also be inconvenient to live with. Unzipping dresses (or zipping them up when they’re broken and leaving your backside naked to the world), moving heavy objects (which I can totally do on my own but sometimes I just don’t want to mess with the struggle), going to theme parks (which is fun to do by yourself most of the time, but there are occasions when you feel like the plague when no one sits next to you in the ride), amongst many others.

What I learned today is that it’s okay to ask for help. It’s okay to need help, and it’s normal and acceptable to want others to help handle your burden. It doesn’t mean you’re weak, it doesn’t mean you rely on others, it means you’re human and you recognize that sometimes, you can’t do it all on your own. Plus, who wants to?

In fact, in most cases, asking for help alleviates the pain of having to struggle on your own, and in today’s particular instance, it made me laugh and was a hell of a story to tell all my friends.

It even inspired me to try out this new look.

You know, the one where my zipper’s undone in the back?

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Glow.

Someone asked me the other day about my glow.

Not about the blush I used or the foundation I supposedly had on (I wear neither, save for the occasional douse of mascara), but the glow coming from within.

It was a glow I’d been feeling for a couple of days now. This bursting happiness, the kind of over-the-moon sensation which I can only describe as pure joy.

Did something exciting happen recently?

Is there a new boy in your life? they asked.

In an ironic turn of events, both an exciting thing happened and there was a boy was involved, though it wasn’t the addition of the guy that was so exciting, but the removal of him from my life.

Remember that boy I sent that letter to once upon a time? That letter where I declared my feelings for him, which was acknowledged with a curt “I got your package thank youuu” ?

In a larger than life episode of the soap opera that seems to be my dating life, it recently came to my attention that my letter had never been read.

I know.

I KNOW.

It was my sister’s telling of an episode of Crazy Ex Girlfriend that prompted me to reach out to him. In the episode, one of the characters writes a love letter to her high school sweetheart that gets trapped in his Varsity jacket for ten years. He discovers it at a high school reunion, but by then it’s too late. He’s now a priest, and therefore…. celibate.

This inspired me to confront him about my letter (not that he’s becoming a priest, but you never know!), after spending the last three months mourning over the fact that I had been rejected without word.

And HE NEVER READ IT.

In a brief moment of hope, I imagined him reading it as soon as he got home, then calling me back to confess his reciprocation of feelings.

Of course, it’s not like the movies (unless it’s a ridiculous rom com), and instead, he made me wait a week before we could talk because it was finals week and he was “too busy.”

(I should’ve known then it was a big red flag)

Forgiving his selfish self, I allowed it, only to get in bed with another problem: arranging a call.

Frustrated at our conflicting schedules, I finally just asked him to be honest, as I was driving myself mad waiting to hear back about my letter.

I never heard back.

Hours went by. The night passed, which was spent laying on a tear soaked pillow from one of the worst breakdowns I’ve ever experienced in my life, and I finally realized that he never had any intention of being honest with me. He had always lacked the emotional maturity to deal with sensitive topics, and I was an especially sensitive and emotional situation.

I woke up the next morning, to a phone devoid of messages, and without thinking twice, I blocked his number, a move I should’ve made a long time ago.

It had been three years. Three years filled with dozens of sad journal entries confessing my heartache whenever he didn’t respond promptly or didn’t give me what I needed out of our “relationship” and today, I finally had the courage to do what needed to be done.

And since that day? Freedom.

I feel so. Damn. Good.

I thought there would be months of emotional breakdowns and guttural feelings of suffocating sorrow popping up whenever there were reminders of him; but, in all honesty, I had already gone through all of these feelings since I first started talking to him three years ago. So when I did finally remove that toxicity from my life, I instead felt released from all that pain and confusion about what “we” were. I felt relief to be free of something that had been hurting me for so long.

I even feel invigorated. Having the courage to withdraw contact from the man who for so long I relied on for validation and attention resulted in a powerful and more confident me. I felt back in control of my life, and brave for declaring that I deserved better than to be ignored. I was tired of hearing excuses from him, tired of the temptation to get back in touch, and I was free of the unhealthy wondering if there was something more between us. I finally saw what I was worth, and he wasn’t worthy.

He has no way of ever contacting me again and I have no way of knowing if he ever attempts to contact me again and knowing that is a weight off my shoulders.

It was a weight that left me with this powerful glow.

I picked my photo shoot spot in a field of fireweed this week, for fireweed is symbolic when it comes to destruction and the growth that comes afterword.

According to the US Forest Service, “… the name fireweed stems from its ability to colonize areas burned by fire rapidly… bringing color to an otherwise grim landscape.”

In areas besieged by destruction, there comes forth this brilliant “showy” (and that’s a real description straight from the Forest Service) wildflower, and that really resonated with me.

Sometimes in life, we gotta burn a little in order for our true colors to shine through. We have to break down in order to break through.

And the thing that comes after? A colorful showy wildflower that holds a certain…

Glow.

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