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Your Not Enough Archetype™ Result

The Avoider

A protective pattern with the shadow of The Procrastinator and the hidden gift of The Conservator.

You may recognise yourself in other ‘not enough’ syndrome archetypes and that’s normal. But based on your responses today, this archetype appears to be the most active pattern shaping your ‘Not Enough’ stories right now.

The Power of the Avoider Archetype

You are currently The Avoider – a skilled self-protector who learned early to navigate around difficulty and discomfort. This was brilliant survival intelligence. Your ability to sense danger, preserve energy, and find alternative paths is a genuine superpower.

Your main driver:

Fear of discomfort and failure. Your core need: Maintaining safety by steering clear of potentially painful or overwhelming situations.

When this archetype serves you:

You’re the one who spots trouble before it escalates, conserves resources for what truly matters, and finds creative workarounds for obstacles. Your instinct for self-preservation prevents unnecessary stress and burnout.

Famous Avoiders:

Woody Allen (avoiding confrontation through humour), Emily Dickinson (creating from seclusion), Tim Burton (expressing through fantasy rather than direct engagement).

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Why this is Classed as Not Enough Syndrome

At its core, The Achiever operates from the belief: “I’m not strong, capable, or resilient enough to face difficulty. If I engage fully, I’ll fail, get hurt, or be overwhelmed so, it’s safer to avoid, withdraw, or distract myself.”

This drives you to sidestep discomfort as proof of your limitations and to preserve what little confidence you have.

How The Avoider Shows Up in Your Life
  • You put off difficult conversations until they become unavoidable.
  • You find yourself busy with less important tasks when facing challenging projects.
  • You decline invitations or opportunities that feel potentially uncomfortable.
  • You change the subject when conversations get too intense or personal.
  • You delay making decisions that could lead to conflict or disappointment.
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The Not Enough Stories that Could Do With Being Unstoried

We are storied creatures. What we believe, what we do, how we live – every inch of our experiences are storied and it’s how we make sense of and move through our world.

But some stories could do with being Unstoried.

You know, the important email that’s been sitting in your drafts for weeks, the conversation you keep putting off until ‘the right time,’ the way you suddenly remember urgent errands whenever something uncomfortable needs addressing.

Stories Worth Getting Unstoried

If I avoid difficult or uncomfortable situations, I’ll stay safe from failure, rejection, or pain. It’s better to not try than to risk being hurt or disappointed.

If you recognise yourself in these stories, you’re not alone. They are universal. They are shared ways human intelligence adapts under pressure. These stories made sense when you needed protection from overwhelming experiences. But they’re no longer sustainable as your primary strategy. What once shielded you from harm now disrupts your peace of mind and growth, keeping you from fully engaging in the meaningful experiences that matter most.

Your Shadow: The Procrastinator

When The Avoider operates unconsciously, it can transform into The Procrastinator – the part of you that delays indefinitely to avoid facing challenging tasks or decisions. You may find yourself:

  • Creating elaborate distractions to avoid important work.
  • Feeling increasingly anxious as deadlines approach whilst still not taking action.
  • Making excuses for why now isn’t the right time to begin.
  • Letting opportunities expire rather than engaging with them.

The Procrastinator shadow isn’t laziness, it’s your survival system creating safety by keeping you out of overwhelming or high-stakes situations.

When you see it this way, procrastination stops being a flaw and becomes a signal that you’re protecting yourself from risk. The work is learning to redirect that same instinct into choosing aligned action instead of delay.

Your Gift: The Conservator

When you use The Avoider archetype consciously, you become The Conservator – someone who wisely manages energy and chooses battles strategically. Your gift includes:

  • Energy management – You instinctively know when to step back and preserve your resources for what truly matters.
  • Stress prevention – Your ability to sense overwhelming situations helps you avoid unnecessary burnout.
  • Alternative pathfinding – You excel at finding creative workarounds that achieve goals through less stressful routes.
  • Self-protective boundaries – Your awareness of your limits helps you maintain sustainable pace and wellbeing.

The Conservator gift is the wisdom to preserve resources, protect energy, and safeguard what truly matters. Where others may waste, overextend, or deplete themselves, you know how to hold steady and conserve strength for what’s essential.

This is a rare genius, the ability to sustain and protect long-term value in a world addicted to urgency.

Self-Reflection Question

This question is not meant to change anything or prompt an action. It’s here to bring visibility to the pattern.

Think about something important you’ve been avoiding recently. What specific outcome or feeling are you most afraid would result from engaging with it directly?

 

What to Notice and What Opens Up

Notice:
  • Staying busy so you do not have to face something you have been putting off.
  • Letting fear decide before you even get a chance to choose.
  • Noticing when you miss things because they feel too much or too risky.
  • Stepping away from situations that feel stretching or unfamiliar.
What Opens Up:
  • Movement where there was stalling.
  • Choice returning to the centre.
  • Confidence that grows through small steps.
  • Trust in your ability to handle what shows up.
  • A sense of direction again.
  • Relief from taking action with things you have been postponing.

Interacting with this Archetype

Notice it:

When do you pull back or distract yourself from something you don't want to deal with? What situations make you want to disappear or delay taking action?

Enquire:

What feels threatening here? What does this pattern believe is at risk if you stay present with this?

What's available:

The option to move at your own pace. Room to approach something slowly instead of all at once. A way of meeting uncertainty without rushing away from it.

Invitation:

An invitation from this gift: choose one small thing you have been avoiding and take one step towards it. Let it be simple.

Channel your gift:

Return to The Conservator - Your capacity to move forward without forcing yourself.

Harnessing the Power and Gifts of this Archetype

This pattern is part of your ego, which exists to support you. The Avoider archetype isn’t something to eliminate – it’s an invitation to change your relationship with it.

Instead of avoiding from a place of ‘not enough,’ you can consciously use your self-protection superpower for strategic energy management, thoughtful pacing, or wise boundary-setting, all without limiting yourself from growth and meaningful experiences.

The shift

You move from automatic avoidance to conscious choice about when to engage and when to step back. You become someone who honours your need for safety whilst also embracing growth opportunities that expand your world.

Next Step

Discovering your Avoider archetype is just the beginning. Here are two simple ways to take this further:

Keep exploring: Connect with me on LinkedIn, where I share regular insights about Not Enough Syndrome™ and the Archetypes.

Go deeper: Book an Unstoried® Insight Session:  A focused 90 minutes where we decode your archetype, separate shadow from gift, and create a path to working with your pattern consciously.

Meet Ebi Lewis

I'm Ebi Lewis, the Not Enough Syndrome™ Specialist and Creator of Coded Stories Method®

I work with clients and leaders to become Unstoried® from the repeating narratives of “I’m not good enough,” “I’m not smart enough,” “I don’t know enough,” or not [fill-in-the-blank] enough that can erode confidence. These are not flaws. They are coded brilliance stuck on overdrive. When you bring them to light and rebalance them, you gain clarity, confidence, and direction as you harness their gifts and power.

With over 20 years of mentoring and coaching experience, and having walked this path myself, I bring both expertise and lived wisdom to help you dissolve these stories and step into authentic authority and personal sovereignty.

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Created by Ebi Lewis, ‘Not Enough’ Syndrome Specialist.

 Email: support (at) ebilewis.com

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