The grease is thick enough to chew, a black sludge that smells like old thunderstorms and burnt popcorn. Paul A.J. is currently hanging forty-five feet above the asphalt of a county fairground, his fingers tracing a hairline fracture on the main axle of the ‘Widowmaker’-a ride that hasn’t seen a fresh coat of paint since 1995. He doesn’t look for what’s broken; he looks for what is about to be. That is the life of a carnival ride inspector. People think the danger is the sudden stop. It isn’t. The danger is the vibration you can’t quite pinpoint, the one that tells you something is out of alignment but refuses to reveal which bolt is screaming.
You are currently sitting in that same vibration. Your business has been closed for 125 days. The roof didn’t just leak; it surrendered during the last hurricane, dumping five hundred gallons of rainwater onto your inventory. You filed the claim. You did the dance. And now, every time you pick up the phone, you are met with the same linguistic shrug: ‘The claim is under investigation.’
🛑
The Coffin of Courtesy
It is a phrase designed to sound like progress while functioning as a coffin. If they denied you, you could fight. If they paid you, you could rebuild. But the investigation? That is the gray room. That is the waiting area with no magazines and a clock that only moves backward.
I recently tried to build a ‘shabby chic’ bookshelf I saw on Pinterest. The instructions were fifteen steps of lies. It looked so simple in the filtered photograph-just some reclaimed wood and a little bit of sweat equity. Instead, I ended up with a pile of splintered oak and a thumb that turned a vibrant shade of purple. I followed every step, yet the result was a structural disaster. I spent forty-five minutes staring at the mess, convinced that if I just looked at it long enough, the wood would magically align itself.
This is exactly what your insurance carrier is doing, except they aren’t failing-they are succeeding at a very specific game of attrition.
[the silence is the strategy]
Edges and Clouds
An outright denial is a clean break. It is a document that says, ‘We are not paying for this because of Section 5, Paragraph 5.’ It gives you a target. You can take that document to a lawyer, you can scream from the rooftops, and you can begin the process of proving them wrong.
But an investigation has no edges. It is a cloud. It is a representative named Sarah telling you that the ‘adjuster is still waiting on the engineering report’ for the fifth week in a row. They aren’t saying they won’t pay. They are saying they haven’t decided yet. And as long as they haven’t decided, they haven’t breached the contract. They are just being thorough. They are being diligent. They are being your worst nightmare.
Paul A.J. once told me about a Ferris wheel in a small town that sat idle for 75 days because the owner couldn’t get a clear answer on a safety certification. The inspector didn’t fail it. He just kept requesting more ‘clarification’ on the welding process. The owner went bankrupt before the ride ever turned again.
We often mistake bureaucracy for incompetence. We think the insurance company is just slow… But the delay is rarely accidental. It is a calibrated financial lever. Every day your claim sits in ‘review,’ the insurance company earns interest on the money they owe you.
$105,000 Variable
The Interest Mountain
They are waiting for you to get desperate. They are waiting for the moment when you will accept $25,000 for a $105,000 loss just because you need to pay your mortgage next Tuesday. They are starving you out, and they are doing it with the most polite language imaginable.
The Burden of Proof
Trust vs. Mathematics
There is a specific kind of vertigo that comes from hanging off a carnival ride like Paul A.J. does. It’s the feeling that the ground is much further away than it was a minute ago. That is what it feels like when you realize your insurance company isn’t your partner-they are your opponent. You were sold a product based on trust, but you are experiencing a reality based on mathematics.
The Sold Premise
The Operating Reality
The math says that if they delay payment by 85 days, they increase their quarterly profit margin by 5 percent. Your ruined inventory and your moldy carpets are just variables in an equation that doesn’t include your name.
You Need Leverage, Not Patience
When you are stuck in this loop, you need a different kind of leverage. You can’t fight a cloud with a fist. You need someone who knows how to map the fog. This is where
National Public Adjusting enters the frame, acting as the friction that stops the slide into total insolvency.
They don’t ask for updates; they demand them. They don’t wait for the engineering report; they bring their own. They understand that ‘under investigation’ is a game of chess, and they are tired of watching you play with only half your pieces on the board.
I eventually threw that bookshelf into the fire pit. It was the most satisfying 5 minutes of the whole ordeal. Watching the flawed designs and the split wood turn into ash gave me more clarity than the 25 hours of struggling ever did. Sometimes, the only way to win is to change the terms of the engagement. That is the definition of a very successful insurance stalling tactic.
[inaction is a choice]
Investigating Your Breaking Point
Think about the last 15 times you checked your email today. You were looking for that one message-the one that says ‘Claim Approved.’ It hasn’t arrived. It won’t arrive tomorrow, either, unless something changes. The carrier is waiting for a sign of weakness. They are waiting for the moment when your bills are due and your resolve is at its lowest.
File Number
Minimized Focus
Empathy Value
Paul A.J. told me that the most dangerous part of his job isn’t the height. It’s the complacency. When you’ve looked at 355 identical bolts, you start to see what you expect to see, not what is actually there. Insurance adjusters are the same. They see thousands of claims. To them, your life’s work is just File Number 7755. They see a liability that needs to be minimized. If they can minimize it by doing nothing, they will choose nothing every single time.
I still have a scar on my thumb from that Pinterest project. It’s a small, jagged line that reminds me of the cost of overconfidence. In the world of insurance, the ‘instructions’ are the policy, and they are written by the people who win when you lose. It is a rigged game where the house always has the advantage of time. You have the disadvantage of reality.
Break the silence. Stop accepting the ‘investigation’ as a valid excuse for institutional paralysis. When they tell you they are reviewing the file, ask them exactly what they are looking for. Ask for the names of the investigators. Ask for a hard deadline.
Demand Resolution
Don’t fade. Be the vibration that they can’t ignore. Be the loud, persistent, and professionally represented force that demands a resolution. The investigation only ends when the cost of delaying becomes higher than the cost of paying. You have to tilt the scales. You have to show them that you aren’t a variable they can solve for by doing nothing.
Contract Resolution Momentum
95% Forced
Paul A.J. finished his inspection and climbed down. He didn’t find the fracture by sitting in his office reading reports. He found it by getting his hands dirty, by being where the metal meets the stress. Your claim needs that same level of scrutiny.
The Final Warning
At the end of the day, a ride that doesn’t move is just a pile of expensive junk. And an insurance policy that doesn’t pay is just a very expensive piece of paper.
Are you going to wait another 45 days for a phone call that isn’t coming?