What to Do After Being Hit By Lightning

Around 10,000 feet, I came out above the treeline. It clouded up and started to rain, but I decided to keep hiking. Then lightning rolled in. I decided to keep hiking.

 

Lightning hit the ground near me. I couldn't tell how near because everything went white. I felt a massively painful shock, then blacked out.

 

When I eventually came to, lots of muscles weren't working right. My mouth, in particular, was numb. I couldn't talk for about an hour. 

 

I hiked seven miles back to the campground. I was wondering whether I should seek medical attention, so I went to the ranger station. 

 

 

Illustrations by Koren Shadmi
February 10, 2016

Visiting Rocky Mountain National Park, I'd gone on an easy, flat hike to a pretty lake with my family. Wanting a challenge, I decided to hike cross-country over two ridges back to the campground. 

"Oh look, a perfectly blue sky!" said this California native. "What could go wrong?"

Ask the Expert

Mary Owens is a nurse-practitioner and a co-chair of the Sierra Club's Rocky Mountain Subcommittee.

"The ranger was wrong. Anyone who has been hit by lightning, either directly or indirectly, requires urgent medical attention. Loss of consciousness, chest pains, difficulty breathing, and neurological symptoms (like R.L.'s speech difficulty and numb mouth) are definite danger signs. And of course, when the thunder and lightning started, R.L. should have gotten below the treeline."

 

R.L. Miller
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