MY BEST FRIEND, RHODA
My Best Friend, Rhoda
I recently heard the news that my
best friend, Rhoda has terminal brain cancer. One might ask how can Rhoda be my
best friend when I have never met her or her creator, Valerie Harper? Rhoda has
been my best friend since I first saw her on The Mary Tyler Moore Show then in her own sit-com aptly titled Rhoda. Mary was the girl that turned the
world on with her smile but Rhoda was every girl. Rhoda was the essence of what
a woman strived to be - funny, warm, intelligent, self-deprecating, resilient,
and independent. Rhoda was always there when I needed her, just like what a
good friend does. I could always turn on the television and seek comfort from
Rhoda lingering in her studio apartment, dressing the mannequins in the
department store window, or hanging out at Mary’s apartment dishing the latest
mishap in her life. Rhoda just seemed to resonate with me at the time and
throughout my life. Maybe it was because it was the 1970’s, when the liberation
movement exploded and women seemed to be soaring and climbing higher and higher
than ever before. Mary and Rhoda became a modern day Lucy and Ethel, with
careers to boot! No one could have seen that coming?
Although
Mary was the central figure of the independent, single girl trying to make it
after all in a career, Rhoda was all of these things too but with an every ones
best friend quality that made her likeable. Rhoda idealized characteristics
that resembled your mother, sister, grandmother, aunt, friend and lover all in
one. Rhoda was able to capture all the neurotic feelings that all of us go
through with figuring out our career path, looking for a mate, and obsessing
over our looks and weight with angst and anxiety. We saw Rhoda looking for
love, finding love and losing at love all with a sense of humor and compassion
that life was gonna be okay however it all turned out. As I would write my
thoughts down in my journal, I would say them aloud as if I was translating
them to my best friend, Rhoda who would laugh and cry with me. Rhoda would
challenge and inspire me not to give up on my dreams and move forward to pursue
my goals and aspirations. Although after all these years, I have never met
Rhoda, she is here with me every day. I carry the image of Rhoda with me and
the flawless performance of Valerie Harper that created such an iconic character.
I have tried to instill the characteristics of Rhoda within myself in the
respect of being that “go to friend” for others filled with wit, sensitivity
and honesty that Rhoda conveyed to myself and millions of television viewers. I
find myself trying to think of what to say to my best friend, something
reminiscent of what Rhoda would say and what comes to mind first is “You know
what, kid – everything is gonna be alright.”
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