These are three actions that I choose to do in my lucid dreams:
First: Set an intention of what I want to do when I get lucid, before I get lucid. For example if I get lucid tonight I would really like to have some dream sex and then probably I am going to become lucid and start humping everything that moves. Yea... Or flying or even being specific, for example when I was a kid I used to tell myself that I wanted to visit Hogwarts. The problem with setting your intention before hand is that these "lucid dreams" are more like a normal dream but that you choose to dream while lucid for a few seconds. So it's kind of like an advanced form of dream incubation. Or in my eyes a big waste of time.
However, since you allow your subconscious to control the dream making process here, you can experience very intersting things in this awareness state.
Most cool adventures happens in this state, but in my experience not in FULL REAL TIME Lucidity (More real than physical reality).
As I describe the feeling of here: http://www.dreamviews.com/general-lu...ml#post2172355
Second: Engage dream senses! Like I described in the link above, the reason to why dreams are unstable is because the thing that is creating it is unstable which in this example is our mind. If a server is laggy and unstable in a multiplayer game then the experience of that game is also going to be unstable. I thought video games was an excellent example of this since it's also a type of virtual reality.
And if a video game is laggy what happens? You get stuck in one image frame and it goes very slowly because it can't process all the information. Or to make it even clearer, if you run 5 video games and 10 different programs on the same computer at the same time, it's going to be a bad and usntabele experience.
And in dreams the same thing applies, if you got tons of emotions, thoughts, expectations, fears running then your experience of the dream is going to be shaky and crash, which means that you wake up. So the solution is to let go or "turn off" all those information generating processes. You can simply practise this through meditation, but simply put focus on ONE thing. Like one sense, touch everything and really focus in on the feeling of each texture. Since you know it isn't real it's going to be really fun running around feeling stuff and knowing that it isn't real, fun doesn't even begin to describe it, it's amazing. Using your own breath as an anchor is also really effective.
Third: You might have seen me discuss the importance of activating the critical center of your brain in order to have quality lucid dreams. The reason for this is obvious, if you aren't critical you are going to be fooled by your own mind. You are going to believe that previous dream plots actually has big importance for your life and you are gonig to act out an imaginary scenario, basically you tell yourself "I am lucid, but oh I need to spend my time solving my previous dream problems!" which is insanity, literally.
I use awakenings as a tool to both trigger lucidity through more activity in the critical center, but also to stabilize dreams. So the third option is actually to wake up! I do this by focusing on my eyes and thinking of my sleeping body <- Huge sign of pure lucidity by the way.
Then I wake up and chain the dream and when I return, it's basically like real life.
So these are the three type of actions that I choose from, I hope it made sense. But if it didn't just ask again.
And something just hit me! Probably, atleast in theory the most effetive course of action for quality lucid dreams would be to do this list from the bottom up.
Start by using awakenings to trigger critical awareness/ thinking, engage dream senses and become aware of the now and then with this stable mind and dream choose to create an epic adventure. Wow I hadn't thought of it like that before, so thank you for asking and allowing me to gather my thoughts! 
Haha I guess this is my two cents.
Sweet stable hyper lucid dreams!
Peace
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