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I get by with a little help from my friends.
John Lennon
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Interpretation

What this quote means

Friends provide support and assistance in tough times.

John Lennon's quote emphasizes the importance of friendship and how it plays a crucial role in overcoming challenges. It suggests that having a support network allows individuals to navigate life's difficulties more easily, highlighting the value of companionship and mutual aid.

Themes

FriendshipSupportHelpCompanionshipCommunity

In practice

Example use cases

This quote could be used in a speech about the importance of friendship during life's challenges.

More from John Lennon

When I get older losing my hair many years from now. Will you still be sending me a Valentine. Birthday greetings, bottle of wine? If I'd been out till quarter to three would you lock the door? Will you still need me, will you still feed me, When I'm sixty-four?
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The writing of the Beatles, or John and Paul's contribution to the Beatles in the late sixties - had a kind of depth to it, a more mature, more intellectual approach. We were different people, we were older. We knew each other in all kinds of different ways than when we wrote together as teenagers and in our older twenties.
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I put things down on sheets of paper and stuff them in my pockets. When I have enough, I have a book.
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Guilt for being rich, and guilt thinking that perhaps love and peace isn't enough and you have to go and get shot or something.
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I regret profoundly that I was not an American and not born in Greenwich Village. It might be dying, and there might be a lot of dirt in the air you breathe, but this is where it's happening.
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I've been baking bread and looking after the baby...Everyone else who has asked me that question over the last few years says. 'But what else have you been doing?' To which I say, 'Are you kidding?' Because bread and babies, as every housewife knows, is a full-time job. After I made the loaves [of bread,] I felt like I had conquered something. But as I watched the bread being eaten, I thought, Well, Jesus, don't I get a gold record or knighted or nothing?
John LennonRead

Similar quotes

We read not only because we cannot know enough people, but because friendship is so vulnerable, so likely to diminish or disappear, overcome by space, time, imperfect sympathies, and all the sorrows of familial and passional life.
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It is important to our friends to believe that we are unreservedly frank with them, and important to friendship that we are not.
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One measure of friendship consists not in the number of things friends can discuss, but in the number of things they need no longer mention.
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We fought in 1974 - that was a long time ago. After 1981, we became the best of friends. By 1984, we loved each other. I am not closer to anyone else in this life than I am to Muhammad Ali. Why? We were forged by that first fight in Zaire, and our lives are indelibly linked by memories and photographs, as young men and old men.
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I've been an important star and lived a full life, yet I only hve three close friends. I guess that's all anyone can expect.
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Quote by John Lennon | QuoteProject