>you probably have some kind of inoperable cancer RIGHT NOW
>you won't even know until it's too late and you're vomiting up your organs
>>66331443
You don't vomit because you have cancer you dumb cunt
>>66331443
Can you even vomit up organs?
was diagnosed with epilepsy yesterday
>>66331591
That's shit
>>66331623
yup
>>66331591
Finland no! Will you be okay!?
>>66331932
i dno
>>66332019
Finalnd, please no
>>66332065
sadly tru
>>66331591
Why Finland, why did it had to happen? You promised you would survive with us!
>>66331591
Oh no not a Finrand
>>66331443
grandmother
>survived colon cancer
grandpa
>died of lung cancer
>other side's grandma
Diabetic
>uncle
died of Pancreatic Cancer
>aunt
survived breasts cancer
>other aunt
survived breast cancer
>cousin
marrow cancer
>mother
diabetic
Holly shit, thanks god we have universal health care otherwise I couldn't get insurance.
Good
had four moles removed two weeks ago and there were no signs of melanoma, but my grandmother did die of skin cancer
>>66331591
No Finland! You must die with the great Khans on the battlefield!
>diagnosed with advanced keratoconus at 16, thought I just needed glasses
>eyesight deteriorated so much that everything was a blurry mess as my corneas formed a bulge
>had to have corneal crosslinking surgery
>doesn't make eyesight better, just prevents it from getting worse
feels bad man
>mfw all these diseases that exist
life is hell 2bh
>tfw wondering how high cancer incidence is for men
>google it
>fucking 1 in 2 men gets cancer in his lifetime
Lads, what the fuck
>>66334925
it sounds possible given the massive variety of cancers and taking into account that a lot of them form benign tumours that aren't noticed
>>66334925
Doesn't every cell have a chance to turn cancerous after each replication?
Given long enough time, you'd develop some kind of cancer
>>66335378
http://www.cancer.org.au/about-cancer/types-of-cancer/skin-cancer.html
>Approximately, two in three Australians will be diagnosed with skin cancer by the time they are 70, with more than 750,000 people treated for one or more non-melanoma skin cancers in Australia each year. Non-melanoma skin cancer is more common in men, with almost double the incidence compared to women.
>Excluding non-melanoma skin cancer,* melanoma is the third most common cancer in Australian women and the fourth most common cancer in men, and the most common cancer in Australians aged 15-44 years. In 2012, 12,036 Australians were diagnosed with melanoma.
makes sense to me