The last time I bought a lottery ticket - and lost - a friend said, "You have a better chance of being hit by lightning."
I checked. The odds of winning the Mega Millions jackpot — matching all five main numbers (1–70) and the Mega Ball (1–25) — are 1 in 302,575,350. The odds of being struck by lightning in America in a given year are one in 1.2 million. You have a much better chance of being hit by lightning. It goes against my limited knowledge of statistics, but the odds are fixed, and the probability is the same regardless of the jackpot size. It only grows if no one wins, but the odds remain unchanged.
And that lightning statistic made me think about what it must feel like to be struck by lightning. How would that experience change a person’s sense of chance, or fate?
The article I found, "What 100 Million Volts Do to the Body and Mind," opens by saying that:
There is no easy analogue. A defibrillator delivers up to 1,000 volts to a patient’s heart; inmates executed by electric chair typically receive about 2,000. A typical lightning strike, by contrast, transmits 100 million volts or more. But lightning races through the body in milliseconds, and therefore often spares it. Some people black out instantly upon being struck. Others recall the moment vividly, as if in slow motion: the flash of light whiting out all vision; the sound, which many survivors say is the loudest they’ve ever heard. The pain, for some, is excruciating, yet others feel no pain at all. “It felt like adrenaline, but stronger,” one survivor reported. “I felt an incredible pulsing,” another said, “a burning sensation from head to toe.”
I did find some references to people who were hit by lightning and survived, telling their stories. There are some shared changes in their attitudes and beliefs.
For those survivors, events that once felt arbitrary or random now feel patterned, or vice versa. A near‑miss accident can make someone feel the world is full of fragile contingencies; a serendipitous meeting can make randomness feel strangely benevolent. You don't have to get hit with 100 million volts. This might happen if you had a near-miss auto accident that could have killed you.
Any kind of powerful experience can lead people to notice coincidences they previously ignored. The world seems to “speak” to them more often. Chance becomes less abstract and more embodied. It is not so much a statistical numbers idea but a lived one.
Fate is the story we tell about why things unfold the way they do. Some of us believe in Fate. Some do not. A near-miss experience might change that belief, causing someone to reinterpret past events as stepping stones toward the present moment. Fate becomes a retroactive storyline.
The experience may create a sense of direction or purpose, even if none existed before. “This happened so I could…” Call it teleology. That is the idea that things have purposes, goals, or ends toward which they naturally move. You might find yourself explaining something by the outcome. "It was just meant to be" rather than by the mechanism that actually caused it.
Aristotle described nature as full of purposes. The heart exists to pump blood. Rain falls to nourish crops. But modern science accepts only functional explanations. Yes, the heart pumps blood, but no, to seeing the cosmic intention of “rain falls so crops can grow."
This post first appeared on Weekends in Paradelle.




