Man In The Mirror Reflection

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I cannot believe that is has already been four weeks—four weeks of constant arduous work that keeps expanding my mind in dimensions I have never sought for before. This past week, it was the dimension of speech writing, the layer I have never thought I would be able to achieve because I am a terrible writer… Initially, I planned on writing about slavery as if I lived in the 19th century as a slave owner coming to a realization of how slaves impede the growth of this country morally. However, that never happened because a new idea popped up- “The Man in The Mirror.” At the very origin of the idea, all I wanted to write about was how discrimination is an issue that is like a record stuck on replay with no one wanted to solve the issue, …show more content…
In fact, I messed up on a few locations. If I were to step on that stage to give the same speech again, I would say my speech even slower, especially toward the end of my speech where I used other languages to say “happy.” I felt like I was able to appeal to all ethos, pathos and logos. Because I have been a victim of racial discrimination, I established ethos-- my audience can trust me because what I am telling is what I have experience. Through Kenny and my experience, I was able to create pathos-- appeal to emotion. I was able to evoke emotions to my audience through my diction, and as for logos, I was able to use statistics to prove one of my points. I felt like I was able to convey my message well because I was telling a truth. Even though my storyline may be common, I feel like my audience do not get enough exposure to it, and thus they may not be able to understand what I do because of this experience I have been through. Every word I spoke on stage was the truth, and truth is something even chains should be be bind behind. Truth is what evokes emotions, and because I was telling the truth, I was able to recreate all the emotions of my experiences through my

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