In the suburban-residential rhythm of Miami Lakes, symptoms often get noticed after the fact—after a long commute, an evening outdoors, a school or workplace day, or a weekend when smoke seemed to “settle in.” Insurers may argue your condition developed from other causes.
That’s why your timeline needs to be organized around real life:
- When the smoke was worst (not just the day you “felt sick”)
- Where you were during peak exposure—home, a job site, school, or time in traffic
- How you moved through the week (commutes, errands, outdoor exercise, ventilation habits)
- What changed in your body—first symptom, next day deterioration, and whether you improved when air cleared
A clear timeline helps your attorney identify what evidence to request and how to frame causation in a way insurers can’t brush aside.


