It means something unique won't happen again.
When lightning strikes twice in the same place, it means that the area has a higher probability of being struck due to certain factors such as tall buildings or trees. Lightning tends to follow the path of least resistance, so areas that have been struck before are more likely to be struck again.
This is not true. Some places have been hit many times. The Empire State Building, for example, is hit by lightning an average of 100 times per year. If you looked at it from a simple perspective, most spots are never hit by lightning, but one bolt does not affect the chances of another striking. So the chances of the same spot getting hit twice completely at random are extremely low. However, lightning is not completely random. Tall objects naturally attract lightning, so objects such as towers and mountains tend to be struck fairly frequently.
Lightning can strike the same place multiple times because it is attracted to tall and conductive objects like trees, buildings, and monuments. The Empire State Building, for example, is struck by lightning around 25 times a year.
Lightning commonly strikes the same place many times. Lightning is static electricity, generated in the collisions between the clouds. The lightning wants to ground itself by striking something with a good electrical pathway to the earth. That could be a tall tree, or a steeple, or a house chimney, or any tall object that will intercept the lightning strike and bring it to ground. Lightning will strike twice if the same place it struck before is still a good, high, electrical path to the ground, and if no better places have been built.
One candidate for the "lightning capital of the world" is the state of Florida. Its location just north of the Tropic of Cancer, between the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, produces more thunderstorms than any other US state. The city of Tampa, on the Gulf Coast, received an astounding 50,000 lightning strikes in one month. (June, 1994) One nickname for the city is "lightning capital of the nation." Johannesburg, South Africa (one of the three capitals) also has a claim on the title. Lightning kills more than 260 people a year in South Africa. The world location that receives the most lightning is actually the small landlocked country of Rwanda, near Lake Victoria in west Africa. Despite being only 1/6th the size of Florida, it receives more than twice as many lightning strikes per year.
Myth
It is just another myth
It is just another myth
Lightning can strikes back at one place but it's just a very very small percentage about 0.00001 percent but it can happen it's not impossible.
It usually means that the same chance occurrence cannot happen twice.
The saying "lightning never strikes twice in the same place" is a commonly held belief, but it is not a scientific theory. In reality, lightning can and does strike the same location multiple times, especially tall structures like skyscrapers and towers.
Lightning Strikes Twice was created in 1989-09.
The notion that lightning never strikes the same place twice is a myth. Lightning can strike the same location repeatedly, especially tall structures or high points that attract lightning due to their conductivity. In fact, some areas are more prone to lightning strikes due to geographic features or weather patterns.
Lacy Dancer has written: 'Lightning strikes twice' 'Lightning strikes twice'
Lightning Strikes Twice - 1934 was released on: USA: 7 December 1934
Lightning Strikes Twice - 1951 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:K-16 Sweden:15
When lightning strikes twice in the same place, it means that the area has a higher probability of being struck due to certain factors such as tall buildings or trees. Lightning tends to follow the path of least resistance, so areas that have been struck before are more likely to be struck again.