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Sunday, April 28, 2024

Security Guard Survives Being Struck by Lightning

An Indonesian security guard demonstrated last week that he was both the luckiest and unluckiest individual on the job site.

While patrolling a courtyard, a security guard was struck by lightning. He was, nevertheless, fortunate to escape the frightening situation. He doesn’t need to be reminded of his good fortune in surviving the strike.

 

The security guard was struck by lightning on December 20th, according to The New York Post. Abdul Rosyid, 35, was working in a rainy courtyard in Cilincing, North Jakarta, Indonesia, when the incident occurred. CCTV footage of Rosyid minding his own business is shown below. Then, all of a sudden, his umbrella explodes in a shower of sparks, filling the camera’s vision with light. The guard is laying on the ground and struggling to get up as the footage comes back into focus a split second later.

The security officer struggled to get to his feet after being struck by lightning. His coworkers, on the other hand, rushed to his aid right away. They rushed Rosyid to the hospital shortly after that. He realised how fortunate he was there.

The security guard’s umbrella was vaporised after being struck by lightning. That, on the other hand, could have been his saving grace. He ended up with many burns on his hand as a result of the incident. After a four-day stay in the hospital, medical personnel released him.

First, consider how fortunate the security guy was to avoid being struck by lightning. Between 2008 and 2018, 270 persons were struck by lightning in the United States, according to the National Weather Service. The catastrophe claimed the lives of 27, or 10 percent, of those who were present. The remaining 243 people were injured to varying degrees.

Security guard Rosyid just received burns on his hands after being struck by lightning. Other symptoms, on the other hand, may appear in the future. Lightning strikes, for example, can leave survivors with concussion-like symptoms, according to the National Weather Service. Memory problems, delayed reaction times, persistent pain owing to nerve damage, and personality changes, among other neurological concerns, are long-term repercussions. Mr. Rosyid will hopefully only have to deal with the scars on his hand in the future.

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