Some things to keep in mind. When your skin is wet, your gloves soaked thru, be CAREFUL!. If you don't have to weld, consider doing it some other time. If you have to, try real hard not to "complete the circuit". In other words, don't touch both sides of circuit at the same time. Don't lean on that bush hog and touch the electrode at the same time. The OCV (Open Circuit Voltage) measured between ground and stinger is not supposed to be over 80 volts, but 80 volts is enough to knock your **** stiff if you are wet.
On a dry fall day you could touch both stinger and ground and probably never feel it, depending on how calloused your hands are. Of course if you just touch ground and never touch the stinger, no current will flow thru your body. Also if you just touch the stinger and not the ground clamp, or the weldment, then no current will flow thru your body either.
Welding is just like working around any other source of electricity, the thing that needs to be foremost in your mind is "don't become part of the circuit". When I touch an electrode to steady it when striking the arc, I make it a point to not be touching the grounded workpiece. I also make it a point to not have wet gloves or wet skin. Dry calloused skin has a high resistance to the flow of current, but wet skin has a very low resistance to the flow of current.
Also keep in mind that a welders source of current is not very current limited from the point of view of the human tolerance to current flowing across the body. They tell us that at as little as 50 milliamps is enough to kill you. That is 50 thousandths of 1 amp. We often set our welder to deliver over 100 amps. That is thousands of times more than what is needed to kill us.