1. Be neat and clean....I make up my bed every day, the first thing and I always have a made up bed to retire.
I like to keep my mess down to a minimum, but to me that's more down to practicality than self-esteem or morals.
2. Be courteous and polite, well duh!
I suppose I'm more polite than the average chap, but I think there's a lot to be said for a bit more bluntness in the mix, I mean it's possible to be too polite. And I've met people who are somewhat crusty but kind and genuine with it.
3. Always obey your parents, I missed the boat on that one but mostly
I never did approve of that commandment. I wasn't particularly disobedient as a child, but I had my moments and I'm not ashamed of them. Sometimes parents are wrong, overbearing, restrictive, overprotective, selfish.
4. Protect the weak and help them, another well, duh!
I like doing that, but I don't see it as my duty.
5. Be brave but never take chances, ummmm, this one is contradictory but bravery is good.
I try to take reasonable risks, but I'm not going to beat myself up for not getting that perfect every time. Sometimes it's refreshing to throw caution to the wind, sometimes it's good to play it extremely safe.
6. Study hard and learn all you can. damn, I went thru HS by only opening the book to do homework. I only learned what I was interested.
By the end of my school years I was proudly doing the bare minimum to scrape through the exams. To work harder would have been something of a waste. And the school expected a ridiculous amount of hard work.
7. Be kind to animals and take care of them. another well, duh moment!
I'm not cruel to them, and I'm often kind to them, but I have my limits. That racoon outside can take care of himself. And I've taken in my last stray cat. Nearly drove us mad finding good homes for the 4 kittens the last one had. Doesn't TG raise animals to be killed for eating? I don't.
8. Eat all your food and never waste any. We were dirt poor so this was easy.
I somehow got programmed to do that, and can't seem to shake the habit, though obviously it makes practical sense unless I find a magic money tree. When I can choose my own food, of course I want to eat it all. But if it's what somebody else has dished up and it tastes nasty, I reserve the right not to.
9. Love God, never understood it until later in life.
I think I understand it, but as I don't think deities exist, then as far as I'm concerned there's nothing there to love.
10. Always respect our flag and our country. I liked reciting the pledge of allegiance and fumbling the words ever once in awhile.
Being English, I guess I'm exempted. If I'm supposed to respect the British flag and the UK, I don't know quite what that means in real terms. I'm somewhat in favour of Scotland, Wales and Ireland going independent and breaking up the United Kingdom. To me, a flag is just a bit of cloth, so it would be like trying to respect a pillowcase. I wouldn't burn one if I thought it would hurt anybody's feelings but I don't quite understand why they'd care. I can respect a person, but I don't see what it means to respect a huge chunk of land teeming with all kinds of life forms. I try not to harm most of it, but that doesn't include bullies or mosquitos. Just because a life form or a thing was made in Britain doesn't make it above contempt. The English aren't as patriotic as the Americans, and I suspect that's a good thing, because many of the seemingly patriotic English are jerks - e.g. Tommy Robinson, Boris Johnson. It's somewhat associated with the far right who I despise.