I wonder why you keep bringing out those two composers whose output contains very little that would make ANY list of mine...
Sorry, I forgot quite how self-centric you are. In future I'll be sure to check which composers you like before daring to mention any as part of a larger point. Nobody said you would want to play them- so why do you need to emphasise that? Is this more of the inverted snobbery about how you don't want to play any technically demanding repertoire anyway? The point was how much further it's possible to get than your intermediate stage- before finally realising how much you may still have to learn about technique and control over sound. Choose any piece you do like but aren't ready for and replace them with that, if it needs to revolve purely around you. It's a lot easier to get there at some point when you entertain the possibility that you haven't mastered all you think. Get someone to push on your knuckles and check your wrist and you may learn something.
Hmmm...no, not really...
What? You've honestly never once had the experience of hearing a piece of music and feeling a burning urge to play it at any cost? And you suggested that I'm the one who isn't interested by the musical side of things? I sincerely cannot imagine how it's possible to be so indifferent to every piece you have ever heard as to never have an experience of
needing to learn a piece that you've heard, out of sheer love for it. I suppose if you have such a dispassionate view towards musical compositions then you don't need to worry much about getting the technique to be in a position to follow musical desires. You can pick one off your list at random, rather than follow anything that comes from the heart.
The reason musicians develop mechanical technique is because they discover that repertoire which they have the burning urge to play happens to depend on it. I suppose that if you're quite so indifferent about what music you learn as to have never desired to seek a single piece outside of a graded list (for sheer love of the sound and nothing else) then it's small wonder that you are quite indifferent about technique.
PS- alternatively, I'm rather more inclined to suspect that you're rationalising retrospectively, so you can tell yourself that you're fully in charge of your own destiny- rather than making compromises you don't care to admit to. Is there seriously anyone on the planet who likes playing the piano yet who has never once had the experience of loving a piece enough to try their best at playing it- regardless of whether they are ready, or if it's listed under their grade? It's part of how we progress. I don't believe that anyone can be so musically disinterested by everything they've ever heard as to have never decided to try to push into something beyond their general level. Did you just quit and start immediately rationalising how you never cared about playing it anyway, or have you sincerely never once had the heartfelt love of a piece that spurs others on to perservere- purely for the sake of that love?