Loading...
Felix baumgartner insights

Explore a captivating collection of Felix baumgartner’s most profound quotes, reflecting his deep wisdom and unique perspective on life, science, and the universe. Each quote offers timeless inspiration and insight.

I'm more a competitive person.

When I was standing there on top of the world, you become so humble, you do not think about breaking records anymore, you do not think about gaining scientific data. The only thing you want is to come back alive

Sometimes you have to go up really high to see how small you are.

Well, I jumped for the first time when I was 16. I just loved it and immediately realized that it was what I wanted to do.

I'm not an adrenaline junkie. It's never been about thrills for me. I'm just someone who loves a challenge.

We want to push mankind's boundaries out a little further.

I had to work with a psychiatrist.

I have no privacy anymore.

When you stand up there on top of the world, you become so humble.

Never accept your limitations - because there are NO limitations.

I like to challenge myself.

Extreme sport has only ever been about goals and the ways to achieve these goals. Adrenaline plays a part, but it's never in the foreground.

Don't live life as a spectator.

I base jumped off one of the highest buildings in the world.

I always feel the danger because you might always be subject to an unexpected or emergency event.

As a little kid, I climbed a lot of trees because I always loved the bird's-eye view.

Of course my life has changed because now everybody knows who Felix Baumgartner is.

This claustrophobia was the only weakness I had. It's not my fault. It's just in my mind.

I want to inspire the next generation. I want to be in mission control with someone younger than me wanting to break my record.

I started skydiving because I loved the idea of freedom.

People are fascinated about the world above them because it seems so out-of-reach.

I've done a lot of things in a business where you're lucky to stay alive, so when the time comes, I'll be happy to pass my knowledge along and help someone else.

If something goes wrong, the only thing that might help you is God.

People are fascinated about the world above them because it seems so out-of-reach. My jump gave them an opportunity to come along for the ride. They could watch live on their screens how someone rises all the way up into the stratosphere.

I know the whole world is watching now. And I wish the world could see what I can see. Sometimes you have to get up really high to understand how small you really are. I'm going home now.

I don't like to rate myself; others can do that. I've spoken with a number of young people who weren't even born in 1969, when the first moon landing was made. They've witnessed the first person to fly at faster than speed of the sound without propulsion. These kids are happy to have had such a momentous event in their lifetime.

If I do something, it's always 90% obvious and 10% unknown.

They call me Fearless Felix.

I'm 100 percent sure I'm becoming a really good helicopter pilot.

I can't bear the thought of my mother having to push me around in a wheelchair. I'd rather die quickly.

To jump and break the sound barrier will not be a mere record breaking experience or another extreme event that ends once the mission is accomplished.

I would've never dreamt that my skydive would trigger such gushing enthusiasm. I still don't really understand exactly what I've accomplished, although I always suspected it would be a truly spectacular moment.

I'm now a member of a pretty small club.

Engage your life with enthusiasm; grasp your life aggressively and squeeze from it every drop of excitement, satisfaction, and joy.

It feels great to be on top of the world but the greatest feeling is when your feet are on the ground.

If the Wright brothers hadn't put their lives on the line, we would not be flying around the world these days. So we need pioneers.

Everyone has limits. Not everyone accepts them.

I love a challenge, and trying to become the first person to break the speed of sound in freefall is a challenge like no other.

Well, to me, my past accomplishments weren't crazy. They required a lot of skill and careful planning.

I have a lot of fears that normal people have.

One of the most exciting moments was standing out on top of the world, 30 seconds before stepping off.

I always had the dream of flying, and the cheapest way is to become a skydiver.

The only thing you want is to come back alive.

You have seen on TV how hard it is to go up 129,000 feet and how hard it is to come down.

Normally, when I skydive, even in winter, I wear very thin gloves. I want to be flexible, with fast reactions.

If you want to do something extraordinary, there's always risk involved. I was always willing to take that risk.

I feel comfortable with what I do and I guess that my girlfriend feels the same.

I don't like to rate myself; others can do that.

The stratosphere is a hostile place.

I once wanted to be a stuntman. I was constantly on the front pages when I was a base jumper. But if I were a stuntman, my name would only appear right at the end of the closing credits, even though I'd risked my life for others.

The only limit is the one you set yourself.

Heroes don't wear diapers. It's just not cool.

I base jumped off the Jesus statue in Rio de Janeiro.

Learn to love what you've been taught to fear.

I'm retired from the daredevil business.

Aviation - and space travel, in particular - have always been especially captivating.

I feel at home up in the air, just like sailors do at sea and climbers do in the mountains.

I was crossing the English Channel with a carbon-fiber wing on my back.

I want to find a nice decent job as a helicopter pilot.

At a certain R.P.M., there's only one way for blood to leave your body, and that's through your eyeballs. That means you're dead.

That spin became so violent, it was hard to know how to get out of it. I was able to get it under control and break the speed of sound...I could feel myself break the speed of sound. I could feel the air building up and then I hit it.