In Graham, exposure evidence frequently lives in the day-to-day: weekend yard work, property maintenance, farming and landscaping schedules, neighborhood application patterns, and take-home residue. The legal work is to turn that real-life timeline into a consistent story that matches medical records.
A practical first step is mapping:
- When exposure likely happened (seasonal application, job duties, or repeated home use)
- Where exposure occurred (home property, workplace, shared outdoor spaces)
- What products were used (labels, photos, container remnants, receipts, or employer purchase records)
- When symptoms started and how they evolved
Why this matters: if the timeline is fuzzy, insurers often argue there isn’t enough proof of exposure—or that the illness was caused by something else. A well-organized timeline can reduce back-and-forth.


