new /biz/ token just launched! - /biz/ (#60587225) [Archived: 652 hours ago]

Anonymous ID: 8i+uOqAC
7/6/2025, 1:09:59 PM No.60587225
952922_028920978abe496e906e4380eef7f909~mv2
952922_028920978abe496e906e4380eef7f909~mv2
md5: f26daa14e5b1992130acffc6bab85113🔍
There are only a few hundred moms on planet Earth but now there are BILLIONS of yourmoms on the Ethereum blockchain.

Just Stealth Launched! get in before price pumps, early x100 moonshot.

Most of you weren’t even sperm and for some neither where your fathers
But here is your opportunity of your generations lifetime. Good luck fren.

https://x.com/yourmomoneth/status/1941719583817335190
Replies: >>60587231 >>60587240
Anonymous ID: 8i+uOqAC
7/6/2025, 1:12:17 PM No.60587231
952922_3ac39657bb124b6f974ab2f8b147bf55~mv2
952922_3ac39657bb124b6f974ab2f8b147bf55~mv2
md5: 3b81bd12ac9e28d46f17dcbe9006520c🔍
>>60587225 (OP)
Web : https://www.yourmometh.lol/

https://www.dextools.io/app/en/ether/pair-explorer/0x37af531d77c57be0692904810a9b49d3d0fd7aa9?t=1751776868941
Anonymous ID: 4QpwBMNv
7/6/2025, 1:15:10 PM No.60587240
>>60587225 (OP)
It started with a dull ache in my back. I thought it was stress. Maybe a pulled muscle. But then came the nausea. The weight melted off me like wax, and food began to taste like ash. A scan, a biopsy, then those four words: “You have pancreatic cancer.”

There’s no slow build. No time to plan. By the time they find it, it's already threading itself through your organs, hiding in your blood. The doctor’s voice was soft when he said "months, not years." My wife squeezed my hand, but I barely felt it — like my body had already started leaving me.

The treatments came fast and brutal. Chemo turned my veins into fire. My hair fell out in clumps on the shower floor. I looked in the mirror and saw someone else — yellowed skin, sunken eyes, a stranger with my voice. Eating became a negotiation with pain. Even water turned to acid in my stomach.

But the worst wasn’t the pain. It was the way people looked at me — like I was already halfway gone. Friends stopped calling. My parents spoke to me like I was made of glass. My daughter asked if I’d be there for her birthday next year. I lied.

Now I count hours, not days. Everything smells like antiseptic. The nurses whisper in the hallway. I hear my wife cry through the bathroom door. I want to comfort her, but I can’t even lift my arm anymore.

This is what dying looks like. It’s not noble. It’s not poetic. It’s a slow erasure — cell by cell, breath by breath.