Four
Life Path 4s are practical, reliable, conscientious, hard workers, and capable of instituting order and system where none previously existed. They are honest, sincere, and have a clear sense of right and wrong. The downside of life path 4s is their rigid fixed approach to things, their stubbornness, and their strong, clearly-expressed likes and dislikes which they’re resistant to changing their minds about.
Five
Life Path 5s are versatile, active, clever, love change and challenge, and dislike routine. They are enthusiastic, eternally youthful people who make delightful companions who can inspire others. They like the new, the different, and the progressive. They are born travelers. The downside of life path 5s is their restlessness and impatience. They have trouble sticking to a task to completion, or to doing it ‘the way we’ve always done it.’ A life path 5 will try to make their own rules or find their own way of doing a routine task, even if their approach annoys others.
Six
Life Path 6s are responsible, honest, loving and helpful types who are always willing to do more than their fair share of the work. They are capable of balancing and rectifying out-of-balance situations. They can be humanitarians with a natural bent for healing. Life path 6s are all about home, family, and friends and their homes are often comfortable, attractive places to live. The downside of life path 6s is a tendency to be very exacting of themselves and to be too willing to carry others’ burdens for them.

Very informative and helpful. I had known about the lifepath numbers, but I did not know if I was a 2 or an 11, because I didn’t know if there was a correct or better way of adding up the numbers. Thanks for clearing this aspect up! I’m happy to be an 11. 🙂
Yeah, that double-checking the math is an often-overlooked and important detail in numerology. As great a numerologist as the late Matthew Goodwin was, he never mentioned it that I can recall, and I’ve found it can make a difference.