Alicia Olive had a unique perspective when shots rang out at the Gilroy Garlic Festival.

“Oh man, this is not happening again,” Olive told KTXL-TV.

Olive and two friends — brothers Christopher and George Cook — have now survived two deadly evenings: Sunday’s festival in California and the 2017 shooting at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas that left 58 dead, the deadliest mass shooting in US history.

“After the Vegas shooting, I felt like I would be there again, and it happened,” Olive told the Fox station. “Angry. It makes you angry.”

The Cook brothers said they met Olive after the Vegas assault through a Facebook support group for survivors of mass violence.

“You think you’re grateful for everything you have until something like this happens,” Christopher Cook told CNN.

The Gilroy shooting spree left three people dead and a dozen wounded. Killer Santino William Legan snuck through a fence at the festival with an AK-47-style gun and began firing, police said. He was killed by cops at the scene.

“I was able to be a bit more calm this time,” Christopher Cook said. “Difference was, in Vegas you didn’t know where it (gunfire) was coming from, but in Gilroy, we knew it was behind us.”

The Oct. 1, 2017, Vegas shooting was carried out by Stephen Paddock, who opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel.

“You don’t want to leave the house much … there’s no desire to,” Olive, who left Vegas and moved to California after the shooting, told CNN.

Christopher Cook in 2018 posted a gripping photo from the Las Vegas shooting on his Facebook page, showing George in a wheelchair being pushed by an off-duty nurse.

George told CNN the friends have been to plenty of festivals since Vegas, and don’t plan on slowing down anytime soon.

“Time heals all,” he said. “I’m not gonna change what I do or how I enjoy myself.”