The Chronicles of Mo Mo & the CB‑Boiz
Chat Edition
Chapter 1 — Rollin’ on the Fay‑Row
In the story, his-story Mo Mo rolled up on the Fay‑Row while chillin’ in his men den. He goes:
“Yo! Dawg, let my people go, my ninyah, let us go.”
Row was like:
“Nah! Ninga nah! Can’t do it. What you got?”
Mo was like:
“Yo! Peep game, brah.”
Then he started poppin’ and lockin’, throwing down some nasty, tight groundwork, ending in a B-Boi pose.
“Oh! You got tricks?” Row asked, then brought his crew to one-up Mo’s moves. They tried, but they couldn’t deliver — not knowing Mo had favor, channeling the spirit of the master: Bruce Lee Roy… or was it Sho Nuff? Either way, Mo had skills that made him the life of the party.
Fay‑Row was mad, danna wet weasel. His heart hardened.
Do you know the number one cause of death in the world? Hands. Don’t yell it out. Gathering 4‑4 is allowed.
In the book, it reads — and this is a quote: Exodus 7:3.
Not down with the rumored gold, oil, and diamond hype. If it were Sesame Street, the song “One of these things just doesn’t belong here” would be playing in the background. Remember?
Chapter 2 — Seven Deadly Moves
When Row’s squad — Wise Man, Official Lock, Sorcerer B, and Magic — tried to mimic Mo Mo and the CB‑Boiz moves, it defined one of the Seven Deadly Sins: Envy.
Row was jealous of the Creator favoring Mo and his crew. He wanted the love and admiration that the onlookers gave them during the battle. Envy.
Not satisfied with all he already had. Embarrassed that his squad got served. Grip, land, ladies… hell, men? Who knows. They tried to bite the CB‑Boiz finesse and failed. They had never seen such skill and creativity.
What set them off? These cats were three times elder than Row’s crew. How? Go figure.
Chapter 3 — Miracles in Motion
If someone went to Fay‑Row 8–9 times, maybe more for adaptation, the squads would unite: Native, LMNOPz, Shawt‑Ee, lil peeps, small folk, veterans, handicapped — all hands.
The CB‑Boiz taught that the plagues, break battles, and miracles were binary: cause and effect, action and response. They brought their freedom requests to the forefront, and unity amplified the miracles.
“Let my people go,” Mo Mo said.
If the pabs with hard hearts said “No,” Mo wasn’t worried — not even a little.
“Throw yo staff down.”
Mo went:
“Fling.”
He just done it.
Exodus 7:1 — he done what he was told.
Favor always belongs to positive, or Hueman, per Natural Law. The seven deadly sins exist to teach where favor resides.
Chapter 4 — Born Into Sin
“Born into sin.”
Negative and its creator-complex is vain AF, psychologically telling Positive that they are not enough.
Negative convinced Huemans that they could reach a “heaven” while living counter to truth. That’s an oxymoron. Slowly dying in hell is more fitting.
Ask yourself:
“How can I believe I’ll reach utopia while living the opposite?”
Footprints are ours if we follow. JC left a model within us — see John 14:16–17. Heaven must be created from within, and action is required. Works without action? Surely not.
Your freedom, lineage, testament — all yours. Write it. Walk it. Experience it.
Chapter 5 — Experiencing the Garden
Humans create heaven within themselves.
We must maintain the temple, walk the garden, experience the fruits of the Spirit, and live the journey. Not a game. Lived.
Mo Mo walked the valley of the shadow of death, split by the Red Sea:
-
Positive on one side
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Negative on the other
He led mucho/many through the light of truth, straight down the middle.
Ain’t nobody looked back. Forward is Positive. Forward is where heaven forms. Forward is living.
End of Chronicles — Chat Edition
Mo Mo, the CB‑Boiz, and the principles of favor, unity, and positive action are your guide. The story isn’t just told — it’s experienced, lived, and carried forward.
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