Every time you step out of your front door, take a hot shower, or eat a spoonful of peanut butter, you are gambling with your life. Yet, human beings are notoriously terrible at assessing actual danger. We suffer crippling anxiety over extremely rare events like shark attacks or plane crashes, while carelessly engaging in daily habits that are mathematically far more lethal. To fix this profound cognitive blind spot, Stanford researcher Ronald Howard invented the "Micromort"—a unit of measurement representing a one-in-a-million chance of death. By converting vague anxieties into hard, comparable numbers, the micromort exposes the absolute absurdity of human fear. It reveals that skydiving is exactly as dangerous as driving a motorcycle for 230 miles, and that living in a major city for two days poses the exact same fatal risk as drinking half a liter of wine. This fascinating book demystifies the actuarial science of mortality. It translates the chaotic risks of modern life into a clear, emotionless ledger, exposing how media sensationalism completely overrides our statistical logic. Stop letting irrational fears govern your daily choices. Master the calculus of risk, calibrate your anxieties to actual probability, and learn to navigate a dangerous world with mathematical precision.