In a suburban, residential setting like Englewood, the exposure story is frequently incomplete at the outset. It may look like this:
- You didn’t apply the product yourself—a landscaping or maintenance crew did, and the bottle is gone.
- The application happened near high-traffic paths—sidewalks, front steps, shared driveways, or backyard boundaries—so residue may have spread beyond the treated area.
- The timeline is blurry—application was “during the season” years ago, but symptoms surfaced after diagnosis or after a change in treatment.
- Multiple products were used—herbicides, fertilizers, and other lawn chemicals—making it harder to isolate which substance is most relevant.
When that’s your reality, “waiting for perfect records” can be a mistake. The fastest path to clarity usually starts with reconstructing exposure in a structured way and locking down the medical narrative.


