
You can argue whether it’s archaic to worry about ending a sentence with a preposition. Personally, that is something up with which I shall not put! I hope it is safe to at least say it’s weird to use the same preposition to both open and close a phrase. Here’s a great example from 1985 — “I cannot forget from where it is that I come from.”
I’m not going to call it “wrong,” because it’s a great John Mellencamp lyric. As long as it works in the moment, all is forgiven. Still, now that’s pointed it out, it’s going to catch your ear every time.
Here’s another classic rock classic that does the same thing. Some lyric archives say the words are actually “in this ever-changing world in which we’re living,” but I’ve always heard “in this ever-changing world in which we live in” and Wikipedia says the original published sheet music agrees with me. In the decades since, Paul McCartney has said that he doesn’t picture the words when he sings it, and although he has suggested “in which we’re living” is probably the “real” lyric, he also said “in which we live in” is “wronger, but cuter.” You decide. In this live clip from three years after the song’s release, he’s definitely singing it “wronger.”

