The 4 H's of 4-H are: Head, Heart, Hands, and Health, so when the Pledge says "I Pledge my... to ... it's saying you (the person saying the pledge) agree to follow what you're saying. For example: "I Pledge my Heart to greater loyalty..." It's saying that you 'promise' to try to be loyal to those close to you, for example, your family, community, country, and world, as it says later in the Pledge.
The 4 H's of 4-H are: Head, Heart, Hands, and Health, so when the Pledge says "I Pledge my... to ... it's saying you (the person saying the pledge) agree to follow what you're saying. For example: "I Pledge my Heart to greater loyalty..." It's saying that you 'promise' to try to be loyal to those close to you, for example, your family, community, country, and world, as it says later in the Pledge.
The 4-H Motto is "To make the best better"The 4-H Slogan is "To Learn by doing"The 4-H Pledge is " I pledge: My Head to clearer thinking,My Heart to greater loyalty,My Hands to larger service, andMy Health to better living,For my club, my community,My country and my world.
It stands for Head, Heart, Hands, and Health. (As shown Below)The Pledge"I pledge my head to clearer thinking,my heart to greater loyalty,my hands to larger serviceand my health to better living,for my club, my community, my country, and my world."
They stand for:-HeadHeartHandsHealth
The 4-H Pledge is: I pledge My head to clearer thinking (place hand on head), My heart to greater loyalty (hand on heart), My hands to larger service (hands out in front of body), And my health to better living (hands clasped in front of or behind body or at sides), For my club, my community, my country, and my world.
no you do not
4 horseman of the Apocolyps.
It is a sign of respect for the pledge itself and for the item you are pledging to.
hands, heart, head, health
The clover stands for head, heart, hands, health.
There is no law requiring you to do so. If you feel patriotic and wish to participate in the pledge, then stand, put your hand over your heart, and recite it. You can also stand respectfully and remain silent if you have any objection to the pledge (e.g. some people do for religious reasons, or for political reasons). Sitting while others stand and recite the pledge is your right, but people will undoubted be offended by this so be prepared to engage in a conversation with people about your decision.
its not stupid and it is against bulling