Here is a link to what NOAA says about lightning safety and tents.
Here is a quote:
"You're cooking dinner on the camp stove when you hear distant rumbles of thunder. Your tent and a large open sided picnic shelter are nearby. Your vehicle is about quarter of a mile away parked at the trail head. What should you do? Go to your vehicle! The tent and picnic shelter are NOT safe places. Wait 30 minutes until after the last rumble of thunder before going back to the campsite."
For plenty more information, just Google "lightning safety tent" and see what comes up.
Lightning here in FL is much different from lightning up north. It doesn't shoot across the sky like I have seen my whole life. It's vertical here, shooting directly towards the ground. I can, and does, strike all over the place. I've lived here just over 9 years and have seen over a dozen trees struck just on our short, rural road, in that time. We have had trees on our own property struck several times.
People can say whatever they want, but I've seen it first hand enough to know it's not something to fool with. The chances of lightning at all, from now onward in the year, are light. It's mostly spring and summer. But, if it does happen, please don't take chances with your family.
Yes, there are plenty of other things to be worried about - tree limbs, snakes, etc. But, you can't control everything and it would be silly to stay locked in your house for fear of what "could" happen. Even so, that doesn't mean you should take chances with things you can control. I'm not an overly paranoid person, just trying to express what I have seen first hand with lightning here in FL. We are regular tent campers all year long. We don't skip life over it. But when there is lightning, I do make my family stay in our van until it passes. And the one good thing about lightning in FL is that it does pass very quickly.
Anyone ever throw a air mattress in the comfort station and sleep there?! Lol
Absolutely! That is actually a very smart thing to do if the lightning is lasting for more than our usual 10 -15 minutes. I have seen it multiple times in multiple states. Once, the bath house at a state park looked like an emergency shelter as there were so many people in there with their air mattresses and blankets. There were tornado warnings so most of the tent campers took up residence.