Fla. man survives lightning strike, spider, snake bites
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Kyle Cook can't decide whether he's really unlucky or incredibly fortunate.
Over the past four years, the 31-year-old Florida man has survived a lightning strike, a bite by a venomous spider and – most recently – an attack by a rattlesnake in his backyard in Lakeland, southwest of Orlando.
"I need to get a [protective] bubble," Cook told The Ledger newspaper.
His father, Mike Cook, sees it another way. "He's a walking Murphy's law," the elder Cook said. "I walk on the other side of the mall."
On Aug. 11, the younger Cook was almost finished cutting the grass at his family's rented house when he heard a loud rattling sound. First he thought it was the buzzing of cicadas. Then, he thought the push mower might be making the noise so he shut it off. That's when he saw the snake coiled about 3 feet from his right foot. He estimated it was about 5 feet long and had a girth the size of a soda can.
After briefly freezing in fear, Cook said he moved his left foot back and stepped on a stick. The noise apparently provoked the snake, which struck his ankle.
He says it happened fast. "I didn't even see it bite me," Cook said. "I just screamed and ran to my wife."
His wife, Sara, said she washed the wound and called the poison control hotline. She then drove him to the emergency room at a Lakeland hospital.
Cook, a self-professed "bigger guy," said doctors told him the snake's fangs didn't penetrate beyond a layer of fatty tissue.
On Aug. 12, 2012, he was driving a sweeper truck for a construction crew. A storm approached, and the truck's sweeper got stuck. He left the cab to free it as lightning struck about 10 feet away. Cook said the electricity moved through a puddle, up the sweeper's metal bristles and reached his left hand. He said he was knocked backward about 6 feet and rendered unconscious for up to a minute.
"It was like Mike Tyson hitting me with a jack hammer in the jaw," he recalled.
Doctors said he had a mild heart attack. He said he still suffers a combination of nerve pain and loss of sensation on his left side.
The spider bite happened in April, when he was working as a truck driver. He was sitting on a pallet when a recluse spider bit his left hand.