Tomorrow will be a better day
How does Rittenberg hook the reader? What’s happening?
What specifics does Rittenberg use to emphasize how older generations saw horrible things in their lifetimes?
How does Rittenberg use specifics to demonstrate his hopefulness?
How does Rittenberg use the title to make his point?
I think he hooks the reader by speaking with a common ground. He starts out by saying what the common worries of a parent are, that we can all relate to, and than he moves to the more interesting worries of his father. I wanted to hear the explanations behind his fathers thinking and hear what exactly he meant. I know that everyone thinks that our generation is going to ruin the world, with all our different ideas and open minds to change. People are scared of change because it makes them uncomfortable and they don’t fully know how to handle it. He sees how his grandfathers and mothers have lived through the pictures and seeing how they all had to fight in wars. He believes this is not the road for the new age. He believes that we will be more civil, and this is where he gets his aspiration of positive aspects. He truly believes that tomorrow will be a better day. If you think about it, that if you have your problems one day, the next day can only be more time to try and fix or forget. Yes we all have bad days and have worries of our own, but to not look forward to the future just because of fear is and excuse to not proceed and excel. He explains how it is better now than it was years ago, so we can only go up from here. He explains his point which makes a valid point for his title. ”Let us not look back in anger, or forward with fear, but around in awareness.”