After surviving a horrendous mass shooting at a Las Vegas festival in 2017 that left 58 people dead, Alice Olive found solace in a Facebook support group for fellow survivors, where she met Christopher and George Cook.

Olive says it has taken her two years to get comfortable with the idea of attending another big outdoor music event. In the end, she decided to join the Cook brothers at a local festival last week.

The venue: the Gilroy Garlic Festival.

Against seemingly impossible odds, the three survivors of the Las Vegas shootings – the deadliest single day mass shooting in U.S. history – walked right into another massacre last Sunday. Once again, they escaped alive.

Three people were killed and 12 injured at the California festival before the gunman was shot and killed by police.

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“Oh man, this is not happening again!” Olive told KTXL-TV of her first reaction when the bullets started flying.

Olive said she and the Cook brothers had been near the concert stage where the shooter entered the festival. When the gunshots erupted, they were leaving the grounds but had not yet reached the exit.

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Christopher Cook told CNN the incident triggered a wave of emotions.

"You think you're grateful for everything you have until something like this happens," he said.

But he also said he was able to be more calm this time. "Difference was, in Vegas you didn't know where (the gunfire) was coming from, but in Gilroy we knew that it was behind us."

Since the Las Vegas massacre, Christopher Cook said, he has not stopped attending festivals, but now he makes sure he knows the nearest exit.

George Cook told CNN that the two experiences were different for him but that he didn't feel much because he has been to a lot of festivals since Las Vegas.

"Time heals all," he said. "I'm not gonna change what I do or how I enjoy myself."

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For her part, Olive said, the twin tragedies have taught her an important lesson: Massacres can happen anywhere, anytime.

“We can’t tell that to the families that lost someone. Say, ‘Oh well that’s life, that’s America,'" she told KTXL. "It’s not enough. It’s time to say enough is enough."