I think Freud was wrong about dreaming and wish fulfillment, at least in part. LaBerge addresses this in Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming. He posits that dreams are influenced by both motivation and expectation (as is waking life). We will tend to dream more about the things that motivate us - wish fulfillment from the basic (dreaming about food while hungry) to the more complex (dreams with themes of social acceptance, goal achievement, spiritual enlightenment, etc.)
However, he says that Freud is "overstating his case" - for example, most people do not find their nightmares to be fulfilling desires. Although Freud might argue that people have latent masochism that is fulfilled by these dreams, LaBerge says the second influencing factor in our dreams is expectation. Even if we are not *desiring* something, if we expect bad things to happen to some degree, they can manifest themselves in dreams. (Of course, expectation is not always a negative influence on our dreams - it can be positive or neutral as well.)
That said... it seems to me that lucid dreaming is a lot *more* about wish fulfillment than non-lucid dreams. Take a look around the boards and read what people do in their lucid dreams: there's an awful lot of hedonism going on - sex, blowing stuff up, flying, traveling, etc. Also, things like contatcting dead loved ones, resolving past conflicts, addressing phobias, learning about oneself, creating and enjoying beauty. These all address our underlying needs in one way or another.
I don't know about interpretation, but perhaps this gives you something useful to think about in addressing your question.
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