TED Talks Daily - Why I attempt the world's most dangerous stunts | Michelle Khare
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Daredevil Michelle Khare has trained with Olympians, run seven marathons on seven continents in a single week, and even escaped Harry Houdini's deadliest stunt. She shares how embracing fear, failure ...and an "amateur’s mindset" transformed her from a cautious child into someone who proves that daredevils aren't born — they're developed. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh.
Daredevil and YouTube creator Michelle Carrey is known for testing human limits through extreme physical and mental feats.
She has trained as a chess grandmaster, escaped Harry Houdini's deadliest magic trick,
And as you'll see from the talk, many, many other challenges.
She shares how she learned to embrace fear
and why working for the challenge itself
rather than the perfect destination
can turn the impossible into possible.
This is me, about to perform one of the most dangerous stunts
in cinematic history.
hanging on the side of a C-130 as it's taking off.
No goggles, no helmet, no parachute.
This stunt has only ever been performed by one other person on the planet.
Tom Cruise.
So I think it's fair to say that this is the first time this stunt has ever been attempted by a mere mortal.
My name is Michelle Carre, and I created a very moment.
a show on YouTube called Challenge Accepted, where I attempt the world's toughest stunts and professions.
But despite my job title, I was not born a daredevil. I was born a child of immigrants
who sacrificed everything to give me a safe, secure, and a chance at a successful life.
They gave up so much for me just to exist. So why would I ever risk that? So growing up,
I only saw fear as a stop sign.
In seventh grade, I was the kid who quit the cheer team
when someone else got hurt.
And my biggest rebellion in high school
was choosing to use the font Gil's Sands
instead of Times New Roman
at the International Science and Engineering Fair.
And while this mindset definitely set me up for success,
it also left me incredibly lonely as an adult.
So I decided to take my first big risk and sign up for something that had absolutely nothing to do with my career, a cycling club, and I was terrible.
But I kept coming back because I had something I had never had before, the freedom to fail without consequence.
Now, most of our learning journeys look something like this. In the beginning, learning something new is really, really fun, and our brain floods with deep.
dopamine at any sign of progress. Some people call this beginner's luck, but I think it's much more
than that. Amateurs often see progress faster than professionals in this rapid adaptation phase.
We have the willingness to ask questions, to look silly trying, to take risks. So it's not luck.
I think it's an amateur's mindset, knowing there's only room for improvement. And this feels great
until we hit a plateau.
Learning starts to feel like work.
We have a little bit of experience,
so we start self-judging as we try,
and many of us give up here.
But if we could find a way to stay in that amateur's mindset,
how much further could we go?
With cycling, I had somehow found a way
to stay in that headspace, even as I got better.
And if you fast forward two years later,
I decided to go to nationals on a whim for fun
as an average-ranked racer.
During the final event, I decided to take a big risk
and sprint ahead of the group.
But because nobody was threatened by me,
they assumed I would burn out and fall back in with everyone else.
But 20 minutes later, to everyone's surprise, including my own,
I ended up winning.
And it was the first time I had seen success
or won something by genuinely just having fun.
So I thought to myself,
how much of life had I been missing out on because of fear?
Could a daredevil be developed?
So I wrote out all of my fears on a whiteboard
and connected each to a unique circumstance
that would force me to address it.
I started posting my adventures online
as a way to hold myself accountable.
To face my fear of being perceived as unintelligent,
I studied with chess masters until I hit a thousand ELO.
It took me 10 months.
To face my fear of confrontation, I trained with an Olympian
to box in front of 12,000 screaming fans.
I bloodied my teeth, I broke my nose, but I won the match.
And to face my fear of being perceived as unfunny,
I joined a professional clowning troupe.
And I'll be honest, there's nothing scarier
than standing in front of a group of strangers
trying to make them laugh while looking like this.
At this moment in the talk on screen behind Michelle
flashes a picture of her in traditional clown makeup
performing an act.
Think painted face with overly accentuated eyebrows and contours
and a red clown nose.
And people really responded.
The show has amassed 850 million viewers.
use. Now, fear exists for a good reason. It's to protect us from danger. Sometimes fear means,
hey, if you do this, you will die. But oftentimes I have found we take that way too far.
Fear doesn't always mean stop. Sometimes it means go. Here's an example. A couple years ago,
I became obsessed with Harry Houdini and his deadliest trick,
the water torture cell,
bound in chains,
locked upside down in a glass box filled to the brim with water,
Houdini would escape with a single breath.
How could anyone be this brave?
So it became my mission to attempt this act
to confront my fear of drowning.
Now, the average person can hold their breath for 30 to 60 seconds,
but for this stunt, I needed a breath hold of three minutes.
It may sound crazy, but under the right training and supervision, it is possible.
But to get there, you have to push through the struggle phase.
This is when as carbon dioxide builds in your bloodstream,
your brain thinks you're suffocating and send signals to your diaphragm
to cause violent contractions to force you to breathe.
Now, for weeks, I failed at this edge,
and my breathful times were progressively getting worse
until my coach told me,
hey, you can't muscle through.
You have to surrender.
And when I finally surrendered to the pain,
I started noticing all these details I hadn't before.
I noticed I was shivering,
which meant I was burning valuable oxygen,
just trying to stay warm.
My wetsuit felt a little too,
so I actually wasn't able to get a full inhale before I went in.
I started noticing all of these little changes
that we began to make and address,
and it made all the difference.
Stripped of the emotional component,
fear is simply information.
It tells us exactly what we need to know in order to progress.
And when we addressed all of these things,
everything changed.
Six weeks later,
I escaped Houdini's trick in two minutes and 40 seconds.
This is me in front of a panel of 20 martial arts legends,
about to fail spectacularly in front of all of them.
A black belt in Taekwondo typically takes three to five years to earn,
but I wanted to see if it would be possible in only 19.
days. Everybody thought it was crazy, and many people rightfully questioned if it was even
appropriate to do something like this. So I knew I could only progress with the blessing of a
respected master. Enter the legendary Grandmaster Simon Rhee. To call this man the best of the best
actually is not an exaggeration
because he literally starred in the movie
the best of the best.
And together,
we did what nobody thought was possible.
In just 90 days,
Mastery coached me to pass every single belt test.
Yellow, green, blue, red,
and I was granted permission to test for the black belt.
Now, Mastery's belt test is a multi-hour gauntlet.
You have to perform hundreds of forms.
You have to spar three black belts at once.
But for the final step, you have to break a brick with your hand.
And after many hours of sweat, I made it here to this final step,
the final inch to the finish line for the black belt.
And this is what happened.
At this point, Michelle turns her attention to the screen
where a video plays of her in a white Taekwondo uniform
and a red belt
preparing to try and break a solid brick.
They are on top of a hill outside
with a Japanese gazebo in the background,
and both the American and Japanese flags
are waving in the wind.
Permission to break, sir.
Permission granted.
She strikes the brick.
The video freezes on her face.
So nothing happened, like not even a crack.
And I failed the entire belt test because of it.
But Master Rui had taken a chance on me.
He put his reputation on the line to see if this would be possible.
And I realized that giving up on this challenge
would be worse than giving up on myself.
It would be giving up on him.
so I kept training for months
after this video released on YouTube
and on day 264
this happened
at this time we see Michelle in an indoor gym
wearing the same red belt
what you hear is her psyching herself up
she hits the brick
and this time
she breaks it
Failure is as painful as it is, a necessary part of the process.
And when we feel disappointment in failure, it's a privilege
because it means we care, which brings us back here.
Moments before I attempted the most dangerous stunt of my career,
a 10-minute flight pattern with me tethered to this,
side of this military aircraft. This was the greatest logistical challenge our team had ever
faced, and an amateur's mindset was crucial. We had to be unafraid to ask questions, to make
mistakes along the way, and be willing to ask for help. On set, we had a fear is welcome policy.
This meant that at any moment, anyone on the crew could raise a concern, and it would be addressed
in front of the whole group.
This strategy allowed us to fine-tune every single detail
from the custom contact lenses I wore to protect my eyes
to the tightness of the harness,
to even the FAA approval paperwork.
It was the only way we could ensure, without a doubt,
we were ready for the impossible.
And with the support of this team, weeks later, it happened.
When I set out to make challenge accepted, I assumed there would be a magical moment
where I'd finally feel like a daredevil, a woman without fear.
But that moment, for better or for worse, actually has never come.
But that is exactly why I do these things.
Not because I'm unafraid, but actually,
because I am.
Thank you.
That was Michelle Carre
at TED Next 2025.
If you're curious about Ted's curation,
find out more at TED.com
slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research team
and produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos,
Oliver Friedman, Brian Green,
Lucy Little, and Tonica Sung Marnivong.
This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balerozzo.
I'm Elise Hugh.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
