"I believe in God, because he is the only thing that kept me going. He's my best friend"
About this Quote
There is a blunt survival logic in Hahn's faith: God isn't presented as doctrine or tradition but as an emotional prosthetic, the one relationship that can't walk out. Coming from a celebrity whose public image was forged in scandal and tabloid scrutiny, "I believe in God" reads less like a theology and more like a coping strategy said out loud. The pivot matters: she doesn't argue for God's existence; she argues for God's usefulness. Belief becomes evidence-based in a different register - not proof, but endurance.
"Because he is the only thing that kept me going" quietly frames a world where institutions failed or felt unsafe: industry gatekeepers, public sympathy, even ordinary friendships that get complicated when your name becomes a headline. The line is both confession and self-defense. If you are cast as spectacle, claiming God as the stabilizer is a way to insist on an inner life the cameras can't own.
Then she tightens it into the most culturally legible language America has for intimacy: "He's my best friend". It's disarming, almost childlike, but strategic. It turns faith into companionship, not moral superiority. It also flips celebrity isolation on its head: when fame makes people treat you like a story instead of a person, the divine "best friend" is the one listener who doesn't monetize your pain. The subtext isn't piety; it's a bid for dignity, agency, and continuity in a life the public keeps trying to edit.
"Because he is the only thing that kept me going" quietly frames a world where institutions failed or felt unsafe: industry gatekeepers, public sympathy, even ordinary friendships that get complicated when your name becomes a headline. The line is both confession and self-defense. If you are cast as spectacle, claiming God as the stabilizer is a way to insist on an inner life the cameras can't own.
Then she tightens it into the most culturally legible language America has for intimacy: "He's my best friend". It's disarming, almost childlike, but strategic. It turns faith into companionship, not moral superiority. It also flips celebrity isolation on its head: when fame makes people treat you like a story instead of a person, the divine "best friend" is the one listener who doesn't monetize your pain. The subtext isn't piety; it's a bid for dignity, agency, and continuity in a life the public keeps trying to edit.
Quote Details
| Topic | God |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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