Desire Fulfillment
Dimension 68 of 1,100 · Health Lens
Desire Fulfillment measures the extent to which an expression centers on wanting preferred states, outcomes, or recognition in life, relationships, and self-experience. It encompasses wishes for change, enjoyment, acceptance, competence, happiness, and being understood or valued.
evidence final name · Wheaton Stress
Minimal Desire Fulfillment
Expressions activating this band are not organized around wanting or wishing for preferred outcomes and instead focus on descriptive statements, circumstances, or unrelated self-report content.
Low Desire Fulfillment
Expressions activating this band frame desire as dissatisfaction with current life conditions and a wish to change, improve, remove, or enjoy things more. The wanting is present but broad, unsettled, and tied to perceived obstacles or unmet needs.
Moderate Desire Fulfillment
Expressions activating this band present clear wants for specific experiences, traits, or social situations, such as friendship, approval, difference, or competence. Desire is direct and concrete, centered on imagined preferred states rather than immediate distress.
High Desire Fulfillment
Expressions activating this band emphasize wanting emotionally positive and socially affirming conditions, including happiness, being liked, having enough friends, and feeling loved. The desired outcomes are personally meaningful and explicitly favorable.
Intense Desire Fulfillment
Expressions activating this band concentrate desire on core interpersonal understanding and valued personal capability, such as wanting others to understand one's feelings or wanting to be good at important activities. The wanting is highly salient and focused on recognition or valued effectiveness.
Candidate names
Sentence counts by range
Dataset representation
Anchor definitions
Minimal Wheaton Stress: Wheaton stress is present at a low level. Expressions activating this band reflect early or diffuse wheaton stress.
Emerging Wheaton Stress: Wheaton stress is clearly present at this level. Unlike the band below, where wheaton stress was characterized by the clinical form, the proxy here has shifted in character. Expressions activating this band reflect wheaton stress at this level of intensity.
Elevated Wheaton Stress: Wheaton stress is clearly present at this level. Compared to the band below, wheaton stress is more intense and concentrated but retains the same essential character. Expressions activating this band reflect wheaton stress at this level of intensity.
Severe Wheaton Stress: Wheaton stress is present here in a general or mixed form without a single dominant facet. Unlike the band below, where wheaton stress was characterized by a general form, the proxy here has shifted in character. The facets that dominated at lower levels have receded. Expressions activating this band may reflect general or diffuse wheaton stress.
