Well, that's why you're dreaming in the first place. I love my dreams, read my DJ and come tell me after that that I limit myself to near tragicomedy I think you'll find my dreams are both very involving, entertaining, and often random and out of the box.
But the mind is a functional thing at its basis, and it just doesn't do things without purpose. Dreams exist for a reason. Part of that reason is that they're really awesome. Another part is that the brain actually is sorting both informational and emotional data during your sleep. I don't personally think lucid dreaming effects the subconcious processings during dreaming, but that's based on my personal lucid experiences. My friend raised an interesting point, I was just curious to see if anyone else had already looked into this or thought about it before.
EDIT: and what the result of those thoughts were.
EDIT: also, I wanted to be able to give her an answer as, truth be told, I don't know. I'm pretty darn sure, but I can't back up my opinion with pretty darn sure. That's what facts are useful for.
EDIT: I figured something like this would be on the main page under "Common misconceptions" but it wasn't, which is why I raised the question en forum. The closest thing that comes is...
Dreams contain messages that are lost with lucid dreaming
Finally, many people take an intransigent stance against lucid dreaming based on their belief that our dreams are trying to tell us something, and we lose those messages by trying to alter our dreams. That’s a reasonable position to take, however, that idea is not entirely valid. First of all, most people that endeavour to have lucid dreams only have them occasionally—perhaps a few times a month. Some obviously will have them more often (perhaps several times a week or even in a night) but again for the most part, on average, those who attempt lucid dreaming still have more non-lucid dreams than lucid ones. Perhaps even more valid a point is that becoming proficient at lucid dreaming demands excellent dream recall. Thus, while practicing to become lucid in dreams you are also increasing your ability to remember your dreams, which as a by-product will provide you with more memorable dreams to sift through in search of hidden insight. Therefore one can practice lucid dreaming and still attain enough “regular” dreams so that he or she need not worry about losing something important.
But its not exactly the same discussion, though I'm certain many points in this misconception could apply to the one I'm raising.
EDIT: (Woot for edits!)
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