The door slams, and my boyfriend of two years becomes my ex-boyfriend, as of right now.
I stand in the middle of my studio apartment, staring after Ryan. Heās gone. Iām not even sure how I feel about it. Offended? Relieved? Indifferent?
Glancing over at my laptop screen, I flinch. A grimace lingers on my lips as I read the form letter for the fourth time. Itās yet another rejection email from a publisher, and it stings. Iām more hurt about their rejection than Ryanāsāand thatās probably exactly why he left. Apparently, I care too much about my flagging writing career and not enough about his ego.
Should I care that heās gone? Does the fact that I donāt make me a bad person?
Iām not heartless, I swear. Ryan was nice, I guess.
But he kept talking about marriage, babies, and me being a stay-at-home mom. Never once did he ask me if I really wanted that.
I stare at the door again and then back at the email. I scan my body and decide that I do, indeed, care more about the publisherās rejection than I do about my ex.
My shoulders slump, and I sink down onto my desk chair.
Ryanās and my relationship was probably over a long time ago, but Iād hung on in the vain hope that something would change. Our relationship was just like every other relationship that Iāve ever hadāand like my short stint in college, or my current writing career: Another failure.
Just like this email. Rejection never gets easierāeven if itās the thirtieth refusal letter Iāve received this month.
Reading the email over and over again, my heart sinks. Every publisherās snub is the same. Itās professional, yet it cuts deep into the fabric of my once unshakeable confidence.
My manuscript didnāt grip the editors, it says. The beginning wasnāt compelling enough.
How much of my book did they read before rejecting it, I wonder?
I rub my hands over my face, sighing. That was the last publisher on my list. My book is dead. Iām single, broke, and apparently, a big, old failure.
Look away while I wallow for a while, will you?
I push myself off my chair and stare around my apartment. My shifts at the restaurant arenāt covering all my expenses. My freelance work has dried up, and Iām not sure how Iāll make rent next month.
I came to New York City six years ago with big dreams and bigger expectations, and they havenāt quite come to fruition. By āhavenāt quiteā I mean I should probably tattoo FLOP in big letters across my forehead. Iāve ended up with a big pile of rejection letters and a very small bank account.
Ryan was offering to help me out with my expenses until I got a book dealābut thatās obviously not going to happen now.
āThatās fine,ā I say under my breath. āI didnāt want your money anyway.ā I talk to the closed door, as if my ex-boyfriend can hear me.
Ryan used his money as a chain around my neck, always making me feel guilty for not having enough of my own. Heād make a big show of paying for things whenever I couldnātāwhich was often. I hated it.
But not anymore. I wonāt use him as a crutch. Iāll figure this out on my own. I press my lips together and widen my stance. Pushing up my sleeves, I swing my eyes from one end of the room to the other.
Is my sofa worth anything? I donāt even sit on it that much. Maybe I could get a hundred bucks for it. The TV canāt be worth muchāitās an old-style thing with knobs on the front and no remoteābut maybe a hipster will want it in an ironic kind of way. My dining room table has three mismatched chairs and a lot of rings from coffee mugs on it. I doubt Iād be able to even give it away for free.
My eyes flick around the tiny studio apartment, cataloguing all my belongings. Only my two most precious possessions arenāt for sale. My laptop and the little leather-bound notebook where I stuff all my ideas. Those two items will stay with me until I croak.
When my eyes land on my dresser, I pause. Maybe I could sell my dirty panties on the Internet or something. Donāt people pay a lot for those?
Shaking my head, I try to build myself back up again.
Iām not a screw-up. Itās not failing until you stop picking yourself back up. Isnāt that on a motivational poster somewhere?
Things will work outāthey always do. Iāll pick up a couple of extra shifts at the restaurant. Iāll put my groceries on my credit card. Iāll hustle harder for some freelance writing work. Iāll sell my panties, if need be.
Iāll make it work. I can do it.
I stretch my neck from side to side and try to build myself back up. Maybe if I rewrite the bookārevise it for the millionth time and make the beginning more grippingāmaybe then a publisher will pick it up. Iāll get a nice advance cheque, and my problems will be solved.
Itāll happen. I have faith.
Confidence starts to creep into my heart. A sense of calm washes over me, and a smile drifts over my lips.
I havenāt been rejected by my ex-boyfriendāIāve been freed. I can do anything. I can be anything! Iām not Jolie, failed writer and tired waitress. Not anymore. No, Iām Jolie, the independent and successful boss-lady! Watch me blossom!
My smile grows wider as my belief in myself grows. I slam my laptop screen down with a thud as a giggle bubbles up inside me.
Laughter tastes sweet, even if Iām alone in my apartment. I throw my head back and let out a big belly laugh, leaning into the feeling.
Freedom.
It feels good. Great, even! I build myself higher, and higher, and higherā¦
ā¦and then reality brings me crashing all the way back down when the lights in my apartment flicker off.
I hear the refrigerator shut down too, as the power to my entire apartment is cut.
āShit, shit, shit.ā I rush to the switch on the wall. I flick the lights on and off, but nothing happens. Using the flashlight on my phone, I find the electrical panel and turn the breakers on and off again, but nothing works. I try it again, and again, and againā¦
ā¦nothing.
Groaning, I sink down to the floor. I drop my head in my hands and I admit to myself what Iāve known since the lights went off.
Itās not the breaker. Itās the bill.
To be precise, itās the red-marked bill currently sitting on my kitchen table, unopened and unpaid.
Tears sting my eyes as an overwhelming sense of failure creeps into my heart. How did I think I could do this? When I moved away from Farcliff, I truly believed I could make it in the world. I had eight hundred dollars, half of an English Lit college degree, and an ego the size of Farcliff Kingdom. I was invincible.
I got myself a work visa to the United States and I moved to New York, full of hope and dreams and naivety.
Bright-eyed, I fell in love with the lights and noise of the city.
Now, the lights are off and itās deathly quiet.
Iāve failed. Professionally, personally, and philosophically flopped.
My lower lip trembles as I squeeze my hands into fists. I dig my fingernails into my palms to try and get a grip on myself. Iām working the closing shift at the restaurant tonight, and the last thing I need to do is show up with puffy, bloodshot eyes and a red nose from crying.
I shut my eyes and try to pull myself together.
It feels like Iām teetering on the brink of a breakdown. A strong gust of wind would knock me into meltdown mode. I keep swinging between highs and lows every few minutes, and itās making my head spin. So, I just stay huddled on the floor, with my hands balled into fists and my eyes squeezed shut.
I count to a hundred. The lights still havenāt miraculously come back on, and Iām still single and brokeābut at least I donāt feel like Iām going to break down and cry anymore.
Picking myself up off the floor, I stand up and find my work uniform. Iāll work my shift tonight and scrape together enough money for the bill. The power will be back on in no time.
I repeat the words to myself over and over until I almost believe them. I take extra time to do my makeup and hair like Iām putting on war paint. I stare at myself in the mirror, fake-smiling at my reflection. I wonder if I look as miserable as I feel.
My phone rings, interrupting my pity-party. Itās my mother.
āHey, Mom.ā
āJolie, donāt panic...ā