For a mundane example, imagine I’m ambivalent about mini-golfing. But you know me, and you suspect I’ll love it, so you take me mini-golfing. Afterwards, I enthusiastically agree that you were right, and I loved mini-golfing.
It seems you can accommodate this just as well, if not better, within a hedonistic view—you didn’t prefer to go mini-golfing, but mini-golfing made you happier once you tried it, so that’s why you endorse people encouraging you to try new things. (Although I’m inclined to say, it really depends on what you would’ve otherwise done with your time instead of mini-golfing, and if someone is fine not wanting something, it’s reasonable to err on the side of not making them want it.)
It seems you can accommodate this just as well, if not better, within a hedonistic view—you didn’t prefer to go mini-golfing, but mini-golfing made you happier once you tried it, so that’s why you endorse people encouraging you to try new things. (Although I’m inclined to say, it really depends on what you would’ve otherwise done with your time instead of mini-golfing, and if someone is fine not wanting something, it’s reasonable to err on the side of not making them want it.)