@Vancouver, all your numbers kind of translate as "weak tight". You're nitty overall, but also quite passive. While that might be fine at 2NL, it's not gonna cut it higher up, where you have to fight for more pots instead of just trying to make a hand.
If I were you, I'd stick with 2NL for a bit longer, and work on increasing a few things:
* Overall VPIP (starting with a few more opens in CO and BTN, and defending a few more hands in the BB).
* More 3-betting in the SB, especially vs CO+BTN.
* More aggression post-flop. This could include more turn barrels, or larger c-bet sizes (you've got a surprisingly low "c-bet success"). In the BB, you might want to include more flop-check-raises and/or turn probes if villain checks back the flop. You're currently seeing the flop with such a tight range that you should often have decent enough equity to make some aggressive plays, instead of passively checking and calling so much. (You're seeing a lot of showdowns, and usually winning them, but the passivity means you're also giving villain the chance to realize his equity, or bluff you off yours).
Fixing your pre-flop play should get you on the right track. By looking at the
Snowie Pre-flop advisor (press the button on the left), you can have a look at the kind of ranges tough regs play. (Note the BTNvSB and BTNvBB ranges, in particular). While I wouldn't recommend
immediately trying to become a 24/17/8 player, if you have an idea of what pseudo-optimal ranges look like, you can see where you have scope to widen your ranges. Do it gradually at first, just adding a few combos. In particular, you've got to play more pots in the big blind, as a VPIP of 16% there is about half of what it should be in the long-term. Right now, anyone with a HUD will just see you in the BB and think "I'm stealing this guy's blinds with ATC". If people are stealing your blinds all the time, then it's really hard to make money.