http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25151253/>1=43001
i’ve always felt that if you were ever hit by lightning, the government should pay you as if you won the lottery. because sometimes people say you have a better chance of being hit by lightning than hitting the jackpot. i don’t think that’s a very positive comparison considering the seriousness of lightning attacks.
• Lightning is one of the leading weather-related causes of death and injury in the United States. Most people do not realize that they can be struck by lightning even when the center of a thunderstorm is 10 miles (16 kilometers) away and there are blue skies overhead.
• The odds of becoming a lightning victim in the U.S. in any one year is 1 in 700,000. The odds of being struck in your lifetime is 1 in 3,000.
• Lightning can kill people (3,696 deaths were recorded in the U.S. between 1959 and 2003) or cause cardiac arrest. Injuries range from severe burns and permanent brain damage to memory loss and personality change. About 10 percent of lightning-stroke victims are killed, and 70 percent suffer serious long-term effects. About 400 people survive lightning strokes in the U.S. each year.
• Did you know that rubber shoes do nothing to protect you from lightning? That talking on the telephone is the leading cause of lightning injuries inside the home? That standing under a tall tree is one of the most dangerous places to take shelter?
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/06/0623_040623_lightningfacts.html
today, i was caught in the torrential storm while walking near union square. i didn’t have an umbrella since this morning was pretty nice and sunny. so i was on 14th and 5th and it started pouring. rather than run to the nearest scaffolding/covered store entrance, i made a mad dash for a telephone booth. luckily for me, i chose to wear flip flops today only because i thought wearing sneakers with shorts looked weird. another good thing was that i wore shorts. anyway, i was stuck in this phone booth for 20 minutes considering whether to buy an umbrella off the street. as the rain picked up, lightning began to crackle across the sky. and as i sat in an all metal phone booth that reeked of urine, i thought to myself that i could very well be hit by lightning if i stayed here, so maybe i should move. i was afraid someone would call the payphone or my cell phone and that would attract the lightning to that very spot. i also remember hearing that you can smell flowers right before you’re hit by lightning. i also remember (from the show, Family Matters) that eating lots of potassium can make you more likely to be hit (good thing i’ve been avoiding bananas and banana-flavored things lately). i eventually gave in and bought a $3 umbrella from the guy selling them right next to me and walked to urban outfitters to meet my friends. i guess this is one of those fears i have that aren’t very likely to happen, but could very well happen. like falling down some stairs. or being in the shower during a blackout. maybe the government should pay me when those things happen too. - 06.15.08
