A common reason people feel stuck is that the story is scattered—doctor visits here, product photos there, job details somewhere else. Before you contact anyone, try this quick organization approach:
- List likely exposure windows: approximate months/years when you were using weed killer, working around treated areas, or seeing applications near your commute route or home.
- Record where it happened in Garner-style terms: yards/driveways, apartment or HOA-maintained common areas, school or church grounds you worked on/near, and nearby landscaping crews.
- Capture the “who and how”: did you apply it, did someone apply it for your property, did you work around it (even seasonally), or were you present during applications?
- Write down symptoms and diagnosis dates: the first symptoms you noticed, the first medical visit, biopsy/pathology (if any), and the diagnosis date.
This kind of timeline helps attorneys and medical reviewers focus on the questions that matter most in herbicide-related claims.


