Atlas / Shrink Thinking / Overthinking
SC-0078Evidence: strongShrink Thinkingfoundational scientific

Experiential Avoidance

Avoiding discomfort often strengthens it.

Shrink Definition

Experiential avoidance is the tendency to avoid, suppress, escape, or control uncomfortable internal experiences, such as thoughts, emotions, memories, or physical sensations, even when doing so interferes with long-term values or goals. The problem is rarely the emotion itself. The problem is organizing life around never experiencing it.

Plain language

Sometimes we spend more energy avoiding discomfort than living our lives.

Shrink Insight

Short-term relief can create long-term restriction.

Why it matters

Experiential avoidance may contribute to: • anxiety • procrastination • perfectionism • social withdrawal • compulsive reassurance • emotional exhaustion • reduced psychological flexibility

Common misunderstanding

Avoidance often feels like solving a problem. Frequently it postpones the problem while making life smaller.

Shrink Perspective

Every avoided experience quietly teaches the brain that it was dangerous.

Shrink Reflection

What have you stopped doing simply because it became uncomfortable?

Shrink Journal

Finish this sentence: "I've been waiting to feel ready before..." Would acting first actually help readiness arrive?

Shrink Step

Move one inch toward something uncomfortable but meaningful today.

Shrink Minute

Growth often begins on the opposite side of avoidance.

Shrink Takeaway

Build your life around your values, not your fears.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Experiential avoidance is a central construct in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and has been associated with anxiety, depression, chronic stress, and reduced psychological flexibility.

Sources

Hayes (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: landmark attributed