This sounds correct to me. Both job and non-job can contain some activities that are intrinsically valuable and some activities that are instrumentally valuable. For example, at job you may enjoy coding and hate meetings; in the afternoon you may enjoy sport and hate housework.
With further complication, that even if your job mostly consists of enjoyable activities, you might still prefer to not spend too much time doing it, simply because you also want to do the other enjoyable activities. You may love coding and sport, and still resent overtime, because although you can code a lot, you have no time left for sport. Heck, you may resent overtime if it means you have no time left for housework, and your home is a dirty mess, even if you enjoy coding and hate housework per se. (inb4 “hire someone to do the housework”, okay imagine a different activity that cannot be delegated)
This sounds correct to me. Both job and non-job can contain some activities that are intrinsically valuable and some activities that are instrumentally valuable. For example, at job you may enjoy coding and hate meetings; in the afternoon you may enjoy sport and hate housework.
With further complication, that even if your job mostly consists of enjoyable activities, you might still prefer to not spend too much time doing it, simply because you also want to do the other enjoyable activities. You may love coding and sport, and still resent overtime, because although you can code a lot, you have no time left for sport. Heck, you may resent overtime if it means you have no time left for housework, and your home is a dirty mess, even if you enjoy coding and hate housework per se. (inb4 “hire someone to do the housework”, okay imagine a different activity that cannot be delegated)