The Leap Rhetorical Analysis

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Have you been in a situation where you needed to survive during a frightful situation with other people you know and don’t, but you or another person had a feeling of being selfish for your survival and not others? It is agreeable that a majority of the population of any country has indeed. Many people have encountered life-changing situations in their lifetime. It is normal for everyone. Many people also tend to become selfish in their obvious actions and improvise on their survival instincts during a life-taking situation. Many people have witnessed their friends or themselves becoming selfish for survival and have this one question people always ask themselves. Is survival brainwashing individuals to become selfish of themselves and think …show more content…
Ultimately, the examples show that survival often requires individuals to act in a self-serving manner to ensure their own safety in challenging and dangerous environments. One might argue that selfishness does not tend to involve ongoing life-risking situations for survival tactics because selfishness is often driven by short-term desires or personal gain, rather than the need to survive in immediate life-threatening situations. Despite the opinionated answer, the narrator in "The Leap" demonstrates an act of selfless survival by choosing not to grasp her husband's ankle and going down with him; it can be argued that selfish thoughts still play a role in this decision. The narrator acknowledges that her mother had the opportunity to take her husband down with her but instead chose to save herself by changing direction. This moment illustrates that her selfish thoughts brainwashed her to worry about her safety and her certain child that is in her stomach. Making her ultimately prioritizing her own survival over potentially sacrificing herself to save her