First, there is the LDR. I tend to lose interest in activities after I do them long enough. For instance, I am an avid reader, but no matter how much I love a book, I usually have to put it down after an hour or two. Reading it for three or four hours would be painful, and reading it for an eternity would be Hell.
You might respond by telling me that in Heaven, I won’t do one activity for an eternity; I’ll do many. — czahar
I don't think traditional Christianity suggests that heaven is desirable because you do many things that you like. One of the centrepieces of Christian understanding of the afterlife (which is not identical to heaven) is an eternal worship of God. Supposedly, you will want to have everlasting afterlife for at least two reasons: (1) you will continuously grow in knowledge of God and (2) you will want to worship God.
The two are interrelated, but the idea is that in the afterlife you will be different from what you are now. Just from this point, we can already suppose that in our fallen state (again, traditional Christianity places significant emphasis on human sinfulness) we have neither moral nor epistemic grounds to properly understand the kind of wants we will have in the afterlife. In other words, on the Christian worldview, our present nature limits our capacity to even conceive of the "heavenly" ourselves. Hence, our reasons for desiring afterlife cannot be grounded in our analyses of human nature and the world the way we know them. Instead, the reasoning is something like:
1. God's revealed truths collectively indicate that afterlife is desirable.
2. God never lies.
3. Therefore, afterlife is desirable.
It seems to make sense, because afterlife is plausibly unlike anything to which we have a real-life referent. Thus, we likely have little grounds to suppose that the world we know can give us a good enough idea for construing what afterlife would be like. I still think though that there are helpful ways to think about why we would want this afterlife.
Traditional Christianity conceives of afterlife as of a state in which people will have a clearer understanding of God and of his glory. Glory/greatness deserves worship, and infinite glory/greatness deserves infinite worship (there's no need to read "infinite" in a strict philosophical sense). If we understand God to have infinite glory/greatness, we will want to offer him infinite worship. Why don't we do it now? Arguably, because we have no direct access to either God or to understanding the extent of his glory/greatness. So heaven is desirable because we will want to worship God for eternity.
Another point that can be made is something like this:
1. Knowledge of God is never complete.
2. Knowing God is satisfying.
2. The process of acquiring knowledge of God is gradual.
3. Therefore, the process of acquiring knowledge of God can last for eternity and is satisfying.
The idea here is that the more you know God, the more you love God and the more you are satisfied. Say we suppose that humans can never fully know God. Also suppose that in the afterlife we will gradually grow in our knowledge of God. In this case, we will have an everlasting source of satisfaction via gradual growth in knowledge of God that never ends.