In a lot of Calhoun cases, the dispute isn’t whether you feel pain—it’s whether the pain is tied to the event. That often comes down to what was reported early, how quickly you sought care, and whether your symptoms were consistently described.
For example:
- After a rear-end collision on a commute route, people may assume stiffness will pass and delay follow-up treatment.
- After a slip or trip near a business entrance, symptoms can worsen over 24–72 hours, but the initial statement may not reflect that progression.
- After a work incident involving lifting or awkward movement, an early record may be incomplete if the incident details weren’t fully captured.
When the defense argues “unrelated” or “pre-existing,” the timeline becomes the battleground. We focus on building a coherent chronology that insurance adjusters can’t easily dismiss.


