Speaking from experience, I tell people that are afraid of lightning that, if they can see it, hear it, or feel it, it is already over because, if you do get hit by lightning, you will not see it, hear it, or feel it.
I was 11. We were putting up a fence, and we were taking turns digging post holes. It was my turn, and all of a sudden, I was in a dream state and everything was white. I managed to stand back up and walk back to the patio, where I did not know what happened. The rest of the family was on the patio, and they heard the boom and got flattened by it, so to speak. I was actually the first one on my feet.
Then, a few minutes later, my head started to hurt, we figured it out, and they took me to the hospital where they found carbon tracks on my ankles.
We will never know for sure, but it seems like heat lightning struck the tree, without a cloud in the sky, ran down the side of the tree, jumped from a knot to the post hole digger, ran down that, dug a furrow in the ground, and knocked a chunk of concrete off of the patio. We think I am alive because I had just pushed the post hole digger down and grounded it, but truly high voltage electricity is a strange thing, and it seems to not be subject to the normal "rules" because of the plasma flow effect.
All I know is that God was holding onto my strings that day, some 45 years ago, and for that I shall be eternally greatful. I just say, when people ask, that that is why all of my neurons are scrambled. :-)>
Unfortunately, senses are personal and difficult to describe to another person.
If I try to tell you what it felt like I would have no way of knowing if I have properly conveyed my thoughts on the matter. So people sense pain more easily than others, some people don't have a problem with a hard smack from a hand but feel extreme pain from a bee sting.... who can compare these different experiences?
So, the only way to find out what anything 'feels lie', or 'tastes like' or 'sounds like' is to experience it for oneself.
Pain doesn't travel through the body fast enough to actually feel anything before you, most likely, die.
Yes, The Auckland Sky Tower gets struck by lightning :D
yes Einstein was struck/hit by lightening
Your odds of being struck by lightning at any time is about 1 in 250,000. If you are playing golf and there is lightning, your odds drop to about 1 in 10,000.
Can Be Struck By LightningHopefully, nothing. Swimming in lightning with all the water that's around you is a very, very bad decision. You could be struck by lightning and possibly killed. It's always good to get out of the water before the lightning reaches your area.
they dont ATTRACT lightning, but if you got struck by lightning and youwere holding an umbrella, then you could be killed
You feel static in your hair.
No because you'll be dying slowly while you get eletricuted slowly and you don't feel it
Yes. You can by struck by lightning at sea. This is not necessarily fatal, but it can be.
Yes, The Auckland Sky Tower gets struck by lightning :D
Struck by Lightning - 1990 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:PG
Don't go out when it is lightning? :/
They get struck by lightning.
They can be
No. I have actually had a few horses that have been struck by lightning, and all were dead.
no because the rubber tires repel lightning
The lightning struck the top of the building.
the part on your body you would most likely get struck by lightning would be penis if you are aroused :)