You wanted to do it.
You even felt motivated.
But somehow… you didn’t act.
At other times,
you weren’t even that motivated—
and yet, you moved naturally.
Why does this happen?
Answer: Because Action Depends on How Desire Aligns with Values
The difference is not the strength of desire itself.
It is the relationship between desire and values.
When the vector of desire aligns with the vector of values,
action becomes strong.
When they do not align,
desire weakens—and often disappears.
How Can We Understand This Alignment?
Answer: By looking at the angle between the vectors.
The relationship between desire and values can be understood as alignment:
When They Point in the Same Direction
Desire and values reinforce each other.
👉 Action becomes strong and natural
When They Are Perpendicular
They are unrelated.
👉 Desire has little support → it fades
When They Point in Opposite Directions
They collide.
👉 hesitation, guilt, and conflict arise
Action is not determined by desire alone.
👉 It depends on how well desire and values fit together
How Does This Appear in Daily Life?
Answer: In three patterns—alignment, independence, and conflict.
Alignment
You want to help a friend,
and you value kindness.
👉 You act immediately, without hesitation
Independence
You want to eat chocolate,
and you value honesty.
👉 The value does not affect the action
Conflict
You want to benefit from lying,
but you value integrity.
👉 You experience strong internal conflict
Why Do Some Actions Last—and Others Don’t?
Answer: Only aligned vectors sustain long-term action.
Desire alone is not enough for persistence.
Long-term action requires alignment with values.
For example:
- A student continues studying because
👉 desire to succeed + value of effort align - An athlete endures training because
👉 desire to win + value of challenge align
When alignment exists:
👉 action becomes sustained, not temporary
What Happens When Desire and Values Conflict?
Answer: We are forced to choose how to resolve the tension.
Conflict is unavoidable.
In those moments, we choose:
- to suppress desire
- to revise our values
- or to compromise between them
These repeated choices shape how we live.
Conflict is not just discomfort.
👉 It is part of the structure of life itself
● Conclusion
Desire provides the energy for action.
Values provide the direction and meaning.
When they align:
👉 action becomes strong and sustainable
When they conflict:
👉 hesitation and inner struggle emerge
Human behavior is shaped not by desire alone,
but by the structure created between desire and values.