Free tool

Are You Avoiding the Right Thing?

Or the easy one?

What you’ll get

  • · A personalized score from your answers
  • · Your main insight and what it means
  • · Quick action steps you can use today

Disclaimer: Fixavy provides general guidance for informational purposes only. It is not professional financial, medical, psychological, or legal advice.

What this tool does

Are You Avoiding the Right Thing? is a free daily life tool that turns your answers into a clear personal read. It helps you name the pattern, compare your situation against common result types, and leave with a practical next step.

Who it is for

Or the easy one?. It is built for readers who want a short, useful result without creating an account.

What result users get

Your result includes a matched profile, a short summary, free insights, and simple actions. One possible result is “The Root: Clarity” — a short profile with its own plain-English summary and tailored next steps.

Sample result structure

  • · Result title and plain-English summary
  • · Personalized score pattern from your answer choices
  • · Free insights explaining what may be driving the result
  • · Practical checklist or next-step ideas for today

How it works

  1. Start with the first prompt: Phone is helping or hurting?.
  2. Choose the answers that best match you, such as “Hurting”, “Mixed”, “Mostly fine”, “I run it, it doesn't run me”.
  3. Fixavy scores the pattern and shows your free result immediately.

FAQ

What does Are You Avoiding the Right Thing? do?

Are You Avoiding the Right Thing? asks a short set of guided questions and turns your answers into a personalized result with practical next steps.

Who is Are You Avoiding the Right Thing? for?

It is for people who want quick, plain-language guidance before making an everyday decision in Daily Life.

What kind of result will I get?

You get a matched result type such as “The Root: Clarity”, a short explanation, free insights, and action steps based on your answers.

What is the first question?

Phone is helping or hurting?

Are You Avoiding the Right Thing?1 / 6

Phone is helping or hurting?