We're sitting at the table eating supper at 8:20 pm during a bad thunderstorm. What better to do during a thunderstorm than eat supper? Anyway, out of nowhere comes a popping sound and I see sparks flying in the living room which is about 20 feet to the right from where I was sitting. Also, one of the three light bulbs in the light fixture above the kitchen table blows at the same time.
What's really freaky about it is that my wife felt the shock of the lightning. She said it started in her forearms and went out through her thumbs, and she also felt it leaving through her nose because her nose was tingling, as was her forearms and hands. She happened to be holding a fork when it hit. I guess the lightning went either through her, out the fork and to the bulb, or through the bulb then the fork and then to her. My twelve-year-old sister in law said lightning travels form the ground up, so, according to her, the lightning must have passed through my wife and then to the light bulb that blew. Her forearms and her hands tingled for about an hour after this happened. She said the shock felt like when a wall socket shocks you. She seems to be just fine now (midnight).
I never could find where the sparks came from. She saw the flash of the sparks too, but she was facing away from them. I just saw them from the corner of my eye. Nothing got fried, though, except the one light bulb directly above the kitchen table. We never did lose power or cable, either.
Pretty strange, I guess. We've never had lightning enter the house.
Just thought I would share that.
What's really freaky about it is that my wife felt the shock of the lightning. She said it started in her forearms and went out through her thumbs, and she also felt it leaving through her nose because her nose was tingling, as was her forearms and hands. She happened to be holding a fork when it hit. I guess the lightning went either through her, out the fork and to the bulb, or through the bulb then the fork and then to her. My twelve-year-old sister in law said lightning travels form the ground up, so, according to her, the lightning must have passed through my wife and then to the light bulb that blew. Her forearms and her hands tingled for about an hour after this happened. She said the shock felt like when a wall socket shocks you. She seems to be just fine now (midnight).
I never could find where the sparks came from. She saw the flash of the sparks too, but she was facing away from them. I just saw them from the corner of my eye. Nothing got fried, though, except the one light bulb directly above the kitchen table. We never did lose power or cable, either.
Pretty strange, I guess. We've never had lightning enter the house.
Just thought I would share that.
