MateoBrown
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 21
So my dad and I have this ongoing debate about politics. It usually goes nowhere—we both get emotional, we talk past each other, we hang up frustrated. But last week I was visiting home after finishing a big rhetorical analysis essay project, and we started going at it again.
And something in my brain just... switched. Instead of getting defensive, I found myself analyzing his rhetoric. Not in a mean way, but in a "I'm curious how he's trying to persuade me" way. I noticed he uses a lot of "we" statements to create shared identity. He uses hypotheticals that play on fear. He repeats certain phrases for emphasis. And because I could see the moves he was making, I didn't get as emotional. I could respond to the content instead of the delivery. And for the first time in years, we actually had a conversation instead of a fight. He even said "you're really listening to me" and I was like...
I mean I'm kind of analyzing you but sure, let's call it listening. Rhetorical analysis essay: unexpectedly improving family relationships.
And something in my brain just... switched. Instead of getting defensive, I found myself analyzing his rhetoric. Not in a mean way, but in a "I'm curious how he's trying to persuade me" way. I noticed he uses a lot of "we" statements to create shared identity. He uses hypotheticals that play on fear. He repeats certain phrases for emphasis. And because I could see the moves he was making, I didn't get as emotional. I could respond to the content instead of the delivery. And for the first time in years, we actually had a conversation instead of a fight. He even said "you're really listening to me" and I was like...
I mean I'm kind of analyzing you but sure, let's call it listening. Rhetorical analysis essay: unexpectedly improving family relationships.