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Getting in Your Own Way: Self Sabotaging

a woman looking through the window and thinking about how avoidance traps you and keeps you stuck

Self Sabotaging

You can look busy, respon­si­ble, and even suc­cess­ful while qui­et­ly avoid­ing the very things that need your atten­tion most. Unan­swered mes­sages, post­poned deci­sions, dif­fi­cult con­ver­sa­tions, and emo­tions pushed aside can cre­ate a pat­tern where avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck. Avoid­ance may feel pro­tec­tive in the moment, but it often keeps anx­i­ety, stress, and self-doubt alive beneath the sur­face.

The psy­chol­o­gy of self-sab­o­tage often begins with pro­tec­tion, not lazi­ness or weak­ness. A per­son may block their own progress because suc­cess, hon­esty, or change feels emo­tion­al­ly unsafe.

Self-sab­o­tage can show up when some­one wants heal­ing but avoids ther­a­py home­work, wants close­ness but pulls away, or wants peace but keeps choos­ing famil­iar chaos. The pat­tern may not make log­i­cal sense from the out­side. Inside, it can feel like the safest option avail­able.

Com­mon forms of avoid­ance include:

  • Delay­ing impor­tant deci­sions
  • Stay­ing too busy to reflect
  • Using humor to deflect pain
  • Avoid­ing con­flict to keep peace
  • Numb­ing emo­tions with screens or sub­stances
  • Choos­ing famil­iar stress over unfa­mil­iar change

 

Approach avoidance and coping with stress

Peo­ple avoid because avoid­ance gives fast relief. A hard con­ver­sa­tion, painful mem­o­ry, or uncer­tain deci­sion can feel too big, so the mind looks for the quick­est escape.

a man sitting by the window
When fear makes every dif­fi­cult con­ver­sa­tion or deci­sion feel impos­si­ble, avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck in the same painful cycle.

Alt: a man sit­ting by the win­dow
Cap­tion: When fear makes every dif­fi­cult con­ver­sa­tion or deci­sion feel impos­si­ble, avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck in the same painful cycle.

Avoid­ance does not always look obvi­ous. It can look like over­work­ing, peo­ple-pleas­ing, per­fec­tion­ism, pro­cras­ti­na­tion, or con­stant­ly stay­ing dis­tract­ed. A per­son may believe they are “han­dling it” because life still func­tions. The prob­lem is that emo­tion­al pres­sure keeps build­ing in the back­ground.

 

Peo­ple often use dis­trac­tions, sub­stances, or rou­tines to avoid emo­tions they do not feel ready to process. Alco­hol, cannabis, food, shop­ping, scrolling, or con­stant pro­duc­tiv­i­ty can all become ways to delay hon­est self-con­tact.

Sobri­ety is not only about remov­ing a sub­stance. It tends to sur­face every­thing that the sub­stance was keep­ing qui­et — and that dis­com­fort is often where the real work begins. Choos­ing sobri­ety means break­ing pat­terns that no longer serve you at a lev­el that goes deep­er than habit, reach­ing into the emo­tion­al avoid­ance that the habit was built around in the first place.

High-func­tion­ing anx­i­ety can hide avoid­ance because pro­duc­tiv­i­ty looks like progress. The invis­i­ble strug­gles of high-func­tion­ing anx­i­ety often include rac­ing thoughts, fear of dis­ap­point­ing oth­ers, and pres­sure to appear in con­trol.

A per­son may answer every email, help every­one else, and keep a packed sched­ule while avoid­ing one hon­est ques­tion: “What do I actu­al­ly need?” Achieve­ment can become a shield. Con­stant motion can pre­vent still­ness, and still­ness is often where avoid­ed feel­ings final­ly sur­face.

 

Why Does Avoidance Feel Safe At First?

Avoid­ance feels safe because it low­ers emo­tion­al dis­com­fort quick­ly. The brain rewards that relief, even when the choice caus­es prob­lems lat­er.

For exam­ple, ignor­ing a bill, avoid­ing a part­ner, or post­pon­ing a deci­sion can calm the body for a moment. The ner­vous sys­tem learns that escape works. Over time, avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck because relief becomes more famil­iar than repair.

 

Why Does Avoidance Trap You And Keep You Stuck?

Avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck because every avoid­ed moment teach­es the brain that dis­com­fort is dan­ger­ous. The more a per­son avoids, the hard­er fac­ing the issue can feel lat­er.

A small task becomes a source of shame. A delayed con­ver­sa­tion becomes a big­ger con­flict. An unprocessed emo­tion becomes anx­i­ety, resent­ment, or emo­tion­al numb­ness. Avoid­ance cre­ates a short-term escape, but the long-term cost is often more fear.

 

Woman resting her face in her hands, looking down with a sad, tired expression.
When an emo­tion is ignored for too long, it can turn into anx­i­ety, resent­ment, or a sense of emo­tion­al dis­con­nec­tion.

How Are Anxiety, Depression, And Self-Sabotage Connected?

The tri­an­gle of self-sab­o­tage, anx­i­ety, and depres­sion can keep a per­son cycling between fear, shut­down, and regret. Anx­i­ety says, “Do not face this,” while depres­sion may say, “Noth­ing will change any­way.”

Self-sab­o­tage then fills the gap. A per­son may can­cel plans, avoid sup­port, ignore goals, or return to unhealthy habits. The cycle can feel per­son­al, but it is often a learned response to emo­tion­al over­whelm.

 

What Are The Signs That Avoidance Is Running Your Life?

Avoid­ance may be run­ning your life when relief mat­ters more than res­o­lu­tion. The clear­est sign is not fail­ure. The clear­est sign is repeat­ing the same pat­tern while hop­ing life will change on its own.

Signs of avoid­ance can include:

  • Feel­ing stuck despite want­i­ng change
  • Repeat­ing the same rela­tion­ship con­flicts
  • Feel­ing anx­ious when things become qui­et
  • Avoid­ing ther­a­py top­ics that feel painful
  • Mak­ing plans but not fol­low­ing through
  • Say­ing “I’m fine” when you feel over­whelmed
  • Choos­ing dis­trac­tion before reflec­tion

These signs do not mean some­thing is wrong with you. These signs mean a cop­ing strat­e­gy may have out­lived its use­ful­ness.

 

What Can You Do Instead Of Avoiding?

The alter­na­tive to avoid­ance is not forc­ing your­self to face every­thing at once. The health­i­er goal is to build tol­er­ance for small, hon­est steps.

Start with one issue that feels man­age­able. Name it clear­ly. Then choose one action that moves you toward repair, not escape. Small actions mat­ter because they teach the ner­vous sys­tem that dis­com­fort can be sur­vived.

Help­ful first steps include:

  • Nam­ing the feel­ing with­out judg­ing it
  • Tak­ing one small action with­in 24 hours
  • Telling one safe per­son the truth
  • Writ­ing down what you are avoid­ing
  • Set­ting a bound­ary instead of dis­ap­pear­ing
  • Ask­ing for sup­port before the prob­lem grows

 

How Can Therapy Help You Stop Avoiding?

Ther­a­py helps by mak­ing avoid­ed pat­terns eas­i­er to see and safer to change. A ther­a­pist can help you under­stand what avoid­ance pro­tects, what it costs, and what health­i­er cop­ing can look like.

Fam­i­ly ther­a­py, cou­ples ther­a­py, and indi­vid­ual ther­a­py can also reveal how avoid­ance affects rela­tion­ships. One per­son may shut down. Anoth­er may pur­sue hard­er. A fam­i­ly may avoid con­flict until resent­ment builds. Ther­a­py cre­ates space to slow the pat­tern and prac­tice some­thing new.

 

a woman in a therapy session
What Does Progress Look Like?

Progress often looks qui­eter than peo­ple expect. It may look like answer­ing a mes­sage, telling the truth soon­er, set­ting one lim­it, or stay­ing present dur­ing dis­com­fort.

Heal­ing does not mean you will nev­er avoid again. Heal­ing means you notice avoid­ance ear­li­er and return to your­self faster. A per­son who once dis­ap­peared for weeks may learn to pause, breathe, and com­mu­ni­cate. That is real progress.

Anxiety therapists pleasant grove utah

Avoid­ance may have helped you sur­vive stress, con­flict, or pain at one time. But when avoid­ance traps you and keeps you stuck, the same cop­ing strat­e­gy that once pro­tect­ed you can begin to lim­it your life.

Change begins when you stop treat­ing dis­com­fort as a threat and start see­ing it as infor­ma­tion. You do not have to face every­thing alone. With sup­port, prac­tice, and hon­esty, it is pos­si­ble to step out of avoid­ance and build a life that feels more open, ground­ed, and real.

Let’s Talk About What is Going On

 

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Further reading

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