Apples pop up in the strangest motivational quotes. There’s a rebellious edge to Eve’s story—sometimes taking a bite is the first step to growth. I think of Banksy’s subversion: 'A wall is just a wall until you throw an apple at it.' It’s about challenging boundaries. Or consider Julia Child’s kitchen wisdom: 'No one’s born a great cook; you learn by doing.' Swap 'cook' for 'orchardist,' and suddenly it’s about nurturing something from seed to fruit. Even Einstein’s 'Look deep into nature, and you’ll understand everything better' feels apple-related—think of Newton’s moment under the tree. These quotes aren’t just about apples; they’re about the act of reaching for something, literally or metaphorically. And that’s the juice of it all.
Ever since I stumbled upon a compilation of uplifting quotes, I've been fascinated by how apples—both the fruit and the brand—symbolize resilience and creativity. Steve Jobs once said, 'Stay hungry, stay foolish,' which feels like biting into a crisp apple—sharp, refreshing, and full of possibility. It’s not just about ambition; it’s about embracing curiosity. Then there’s Maya Angelou’s twist: 'You can’t use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have.' It reminds me of an apple tree—endlessly generous. Even Isaac Newton’s apple moment wasn’t just about gravity; it’s a metaphor for noticing the ordinary in extraordinary ways. These quotes stick with me because they turn something simple into a spark.
On a lighter note, I love how Dolly Parton once joked, 'The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.' It’s not directly about apples, but it fits—like waiting for the perfect harvest. And who could forget the playful wisdom in 'An apple a day keeps the doctor away'? It’s a reminder that small, consistent actions lead to big results. Celebrities often weave apples into their wisdom because they’re universal—everyone understands their sweetness, their crunch, their symbolism of growth. It’s less about the fruit and more about what we project onto it: health, knowledge, temptation, or innovation.
I’ve always been drawn to quotes that use apples as a metaphor for life’s bigger lessons. Take Audrey Hepburn’s elegant take: 'To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow.' While not directly about apples, it captures the patience of tending an orchard. Then there’s the sharp wit of Oscar Wilde: 'The only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it.' Imagine Eve’s apple in Eden—sometimes yielding leads to knowledge, messy as it may be. Even modern figures like Tim Cook echo this: 'We believe that people with passion can change the world.' It’s that core idea—apples as catalysts.
What’s funny is how apples bridge generations. My grandma would say, 'The best apples are at the top of the tree,' meaning hard work pays off. Meanwhile, tech visionaries like Jobs framed them as symbols of disruption. It’s this duality—humble yet revolutionary—that makes apple quotes so versatile. They’re not just motivational; they’re little stories waiting to be unpacked, whether about ambition, health, or biting into the unknown.
2026-05-25 02:43:18
11
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
I Kissed A CEO And He Liked It!
LiLhyz
9.9
1.5M
After just a week of getting dumped, Gabrielle Taylor learned from a common friend that her ex-boyfriend and best friend were already engaged.
Enraged by their betrayal, Gabrielle crashed into their engagement party and drank to her heart's desire. She put up a face and even wished her best friend and ex-boyfriend all the best.
Claiming to already be in a relationship, Gabrielle walked up to a stranger and kissed him outright! .
***
Other than his mother, his sisters, and his niece, Kyle Wright, the CEO of the Wright Diamond Corporation, never batted an eye for a woman. He was satisfied, running a business, not intending to be in any relationship.
One evening, while excusing himself from a family gathering, a girl came up to him and kissed him out of the blue. His heart raced!
Except for the drumming sensation in his chest, he felt everything around him turned mute. He took a deep breath and savored that blossoming scent, coming from the girl.
His eyes unwittingly closed as he found himself relishing the brief but stirring kiss!
When the kiss ended, Kyle's eyes struggled to open. It was as if time had stopped, and it suddenly dawned on him that for the first time since he could remember, he experienced what it felt like… getting a boner.
After that fateful kiss, he swore to make Gabrielle his.
***
Book 3 of the Wright Family Series
Book 1: Mommy, Where Is Daddy? The Forsaken Daughter's Return
Book 2: Flash Marriage: A Billionaire For A Rebound
Book 4: The Devil's Love For The Heiress
Book 5: I Fell For The Boy His Daddy Was A BonusNote:
Each story can be read as a standalone. Follow me on social media. Search Author_LiLhyz on IG & FB.
"Let go of your inhibitions. Push your boundaries. Explore your limitations. Take my hand, say yes, and be mine forever!"
My name is Annalise Walsh, I live in Los Angeles and I’m working as an advertising executive (an AE) for “S&W Advertising”, a small but fierce agency. My goal right now is to put my hands on a very important account. I’m talking about “HL Sportswear” a new branch of “Hamilton Inc.”, a company that belongs to the sexiest man alive, Lance Hamilton.
My name is Lance Hamilton and I’m the youngest CEO in the States. I’m heir to billions and a billionaire in my own right. I’m quite ambitious and I’m constantly trying to expand my business towards new horizons. “HL Sportswear” needs to be presented to the world and for that, I need the best AE in the city: the intelligent and gorgeous Annalise Walsh.
Working for Lance isn't going to be easy for Annalise, but is going to be extremely interesting. That's for sure!
Mira POV ....
" He's" a Famous Billionaire celebrity I could never have him."
Mira lives quietly under the cruelty of her stepmother, carrying dreams she knows she’s not allowed to have.
Her only escape is the voice of De.King a billionaire celebrity adored by the world but unreachable to someone like her.
When fate brings them into the same space, Mira learns that loving him could destroy her, while De.King discovers that the girl he shouldn’t notice is the only one who sees him beyond fame.
In a world ruled by power, status, and secrets, their love becomes the only one thing they were never meant to have.
He was, and had nothing when I met him.
He was a terribly poor dreamer, and all he had was smooth words and endless promises.
I gave up everything for him, including my family’s wealth, my privileged life, my identity as an heiress. I hid who I really was just to help him climb the ladder, brick by brick, until his name shone like gold. Our empire was built on my sacrifices.
And how did he repay me?
By throwing me away like a piece of used, wet tissue.
By parading his new fiancée in my face and sneering, “Don’t you think I’m out of your league now?” He thought he could erase me. He thought he could take my love, my labor, my loyalty…and bury me like garbage.
But he forgot one thing.
I’m not just a girl he used. I’m an heiress.
The gold in his pocket? The power in his hands? The empire on his shoulders?
All of it came from me.
Now I’ve returned to the world I left behind, with bodyguards at my side, a new fiancé chosen by my family, and more power than he could ever dream of.
And when he calls me a gold digger? I’ll smile and remind him of the truth…
“Gold digger? No. I’m the gold maker. And without me, Mr. Billionaire, you are nothing.”
Comments and Followers will be appreciated* Emily, a cashier at a small bookstore in New York meets Adam, CEO of Jacob Enterprises. He is seen as ruthless, arrogant and words that are not fit for the human ear to his employees because of the way he acts towards them. Emily is skeptical about being with Adam while Adam doesn’t want to let go of his lifestyle that he enjoys. They both decide to let go of their fears and enter into a relationship that started off rocky but ended up being blissful and loving. They continue to grow with each other, but what they don't know is that external forces are planning to break them up and tragedy happens in the end that leaves Emily shaken to the core.
Tamara Wesley was a 21 years old girl that works in a coffee shop, she had a dream of meeting her favorite Celebrity- Rodney Shaw.
On a very good day, she ran into Rodney Shaw at the middle of the road but to her utmost surprise, the reaction Rodney gave her wasn't what she expected.
Tamara as a young girl has suffered a lot in the hands of her supposed Dad.
On her way home after work one day, she saw a poster of Rodney while staring at it, she bumped into a guy Jason, and accidentally smashed his phone. Jason was really furious at her and asked her to pay a price by becoming his personal maid since she couldn't afford to repair the phone.
On the long run, Jason asked Tamara to accompany him to Rodney show. At the show, Rodney and Tamara met again for the second time.
However, Rodney and Jason are stepbrothers but it's quiet unknown to the world because they really detest each other. At the long run, both brothers discovered that they were in love with Tamara.
Maya Angelou's words hit me like a tidal wave the first time I read 'I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.' It wasn’t just the elegance of the phrasing—it was the weight behind it. As someone who grew up feeling invisible, that quote reshaped how I interact with others. It’s not about grand gestures; it’s about the lingering warmth of kindness. I’ve seen this idea echoed everywhere from 'The Help' to TED Talks, but Angelou distilled it into something unforgettable. Her voice carries this quiet power that makes you want to be better without ever raising hers.
What’s wild is how often I stumble upon this sentiment in unexpected places—like in the anime 'Violet Evergarden,' where letters become emotional lifelines, or in indie games like 'Spiritfarer,' where farewells are about comfort, not spectacle. Angelou’s quote feels like the backbone of so many stories I love. It’s not inspirational in a flashy, motivational-poster way; it’s a compass for living.
One quote that's stuck with me for years is from Dolly Parton: 'Don’t get so busy making a living that you forget to make a life.' It hit me hard when I first heard it because I was grinding through late nights at work, thinking success was just about hustle. But she’s right—what’s the point if you’re too exhausted to enjoy it? I started prioritizing small joys, like weekend hikes or cooking with friends, and it changed everything.
Another gem is from Keanu Reeves: 'The simple act of paying attention can take you a long way.' I used to multitask constantly, half-listening to people while checking my phone. Now I try to be fully present in conversations, and it’s wild how much deeper my relationships feel. Celeb advice isn’t always profound, but these two? Lifesavers.
Apples pop up everywhere in literature, often carrying deep symbolism—sometimes temptation, sometimes knowledge, sometimes just cozy autumnal vibes. One iconic line comes from Walt Whitman’s 'Song of Myself': 'I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love, / If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles.' Though not directly about apples, his earthy imagery always makes me think of orchards and the cycle of life. Then there’s Robert Frost’s 'After Apple-Picking,' where exhaustion and harvest blend into something haunting: 'I am overtired / Of the great harvest I myself desired.' It’s less about the fruit and more about human ambition, but oh, those drowsy apple-scented lines stick with me.
For something lighter, Tolkien’s hobbits gushing over 'apples and sweet berries' in 'The Fellowship of the Ring' captures that wholesome, pastoral joy. And who could forget the wicked queen’s 'Apple red as blood' in 'Snow White'? It’s chilling how something so simple becomes a weapon. Literature’s apples are never just snacks—they’re metaphors with cores of meaning.
Nothing beats the crisp imagery of apple-related quotes when you want to add a bite-sized punch to your social media posts. I’ve scoured Pinterest for minimalist designs with phrases like 'An apple a day keeps the scroll away'—playful twists on classics always grab attention. Tumblr’s aesthetic text blogs are goldmines for poetic snippets, like 'She held the apple, knowing its sweetness hid seeds of change.' For humor, Reddit threads like r/QuotesPorn toss around gems like 'Newton’s apple: the original gravity check.' Don’t overlook Goodreads’ quote section under books like 'The Botany of Desire,' where apple symbolism gets philosophical.
If you’re crafting captions, blend seasonal vibes—autumn calls for 'Cider kisses and apple-core confessions,' while spring leans into 'Blossoms to crunch, life’s juicy cycle.' Instagram hashtags like #AppleQuotes or #CoreWisdom surface unexpected finds, from Zen proverbs to tech puns ('Byte into innovation'). Save screenshots to a dedicated album for quick access—I’ve got one labeled 'Orchard Thoughts' that’s saved me mid-post countless times.