All else being equal, if you “wanted” to do something but then didn’t do it, it means you didn’t actually want to do it. Maybe you thought you should, you recognised the value etc. But that is very different to actually wanting something. You have no problem doing what you want.
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speaking for myself, this is phenomenologically simply false. e.g. I don't *want* to binge, I don't *want* to shirk my duties for procrastinatory lollygagging -yet I do! The experience of desire, of "I want", is the same or even stronger, as in cases of fully egosyntonic behavior
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Great point :) I recently read a book “the courage to be disliked” and it outlines Adlerian psychology that everything you do is “serving” some need even if the behaviour is negative in valence (like addiction). But I do love you point about ego-less “automatic”(?) behaviours
End of conversation
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