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"Man's greatest passion isn't sex, money, or power. It is laziness." — Carl Jung (quoted from memory)
You don't have to be a workaholic or grimly committed to constant doing, but you do want to avoid lethargic passivity. Getting to work with intensity is usually much more fulfilling than a life of postponement and negative inertia. Psychologically, there is a conservative tendency to maintain the status quo, to become more habitual, mechanical, and resistant to change.
Research shows that it's a fundamental mistake to wait to be motivated before taking action. It is much better just to act and then motivation will be aroused by that. At my present age, awakening in the morning is often a difficult time with joint pain and downbeat feelings. But for me, physical discomforts and moods are background noise. I have a whole series of defined steps — stretches, whole body vibration machine, etc. to go through every morning with the goal of getting myself in front of the keyboard for a writing session. Once I get going with my creative session, all the lethargic morning funk quickly evaporates as it's overpowered by the fire of meaningful action. As it says in the ancient yoga aphorisms of Patanjali, "Energy is like a muscle, it grows stronger with being used."
Movement is life. The answer to lethargy, depressed moods, etc. (all yin states) is to get up and take positive action with anything from mundane tasks to your greatest dreams.
Consider this an auspicious time to overcome inertia with useful action.