lol -- what a mix of metaphors!
Time to heal is really important, and whether we ask for and accept the help of others or do it on our own is a matter of personal preference, I suppose. My father would always say "If you want a job done right, do it yourself", and that tenet was so deeply embedded in my belief system that it took this crash and burn for me to realize that asking for and accepting help is not a sign of weakness but rather a sign of wisdom.
My mother continues to live in the house we grew up in, though alone since my father passed away 2 years ago. She's 81 and very fit, healthy and active. Sometime last year, she wanted to get an old desk down from the second floor to put out for Goodwill or whoever to take away. She managed to get it down the staircase on her own, but got stuck at the landing. Her next door neighbour was outside -- they're a young couple with 2 very young children -- so she called out and asked if he could help her with the desk. He was more than happy to help, and the two of them got in down to the curb in less than 2 minutes. My eldest brother, hearing of this, chastised my mother for asking for help from the neighbours -- if she needed help, she should have asked family. Well, she'd been asking both of my brothers for a couple of weeks, but they were always too busy. Even so, my mother went from feeling pleased that the desk was out, to feeling guilty for asking for help.
As it was, the neighbour had been more than happy to help, and my mother's gesture of asking him opened up the relationship so that they were comfortable in offering to rake her leaves, and in asking if she could keep an eye on their kids while they ran a quick errand. Life is a little easier for all of them, and more enjoyable because it's a nice feeling, helping someone else.
Yes, a solid and sturdy house can be built without nails, and nails can be a bother because you have to learn how to forge them and someone might give you the wrong information so the nails you forge don't come out high quality, so you have to do them over again. And you may not actually find out that some nails are poor quality until part of the house falls down, so you have to rebuild it. In the end, it comes down to the desired goal of building the house.
You can decide that you're going to build it yourself with no nails -- it's going to be a masterpiece of engineering, and will go down in history as one of the very few houses to be built this way this well. You thoroughly research the methodology, gather all the implements, including the lines and pulleys and braces you'll need to keep the vertical beams standing straight while you put the cross beams in place (since you're doing this on your own).
You can decide that you're going to build it yourself with nails -- it's going to be of such superb quality that your great-great-great-great-great-great-grandchildren will be able to live in it comfortably and cosily. You thoroughly research how to forge nails, and you practice and practice until your nails are perfect. Again, you gather all the implements, including the lines and pulleys and braces you'll need, since you're doing this on your own.
You decide to hire expert craftspeople to work with you. They recommend using nails -- intriguing as the challenge of building a house without nails may be, it would take several years longer than if built with nails. They'd be happy to do it if that what you really want, but they charge by the hour. So they teach you how to forge the nails, supervising as you go, and after a few rather crooked or bendy ones, you're able to forge all the high quality nails you need. The craftspeople have all the implements, and you won't need the lines, pulleys and braces because there'll be enough of you to support each other as you build.
You decide to gather all your friends and neighbours to help you build, with the offe