The answer is:
the use of the words “I” and “my”
The first-person point of view lets the audience feel a connection with the narrator and acknowledge his emotions, ideas and motifs. It uses of words like I, me, mine and my.
In the passage from "How I Learned English," the author Gregory Djanikian describes a scene in which the narrator and other boys are playing baseball. He feels that he cannot play baseball well because he has just emigrated from Egypt and is not familiar with the game. As a result, the first-person point of view allows readers to see that he feels as an outsider, even though the children help him and enjoy hanging around with him.