Welcome LucidMonogatari 
In the beggining you start out by looking at lucidity and ask yourself the question, what kind of actions or methods is it that brings you forward and make you lucid?
This kind of reasoning is perfectly normal, although in my eyes this it's not the best approach to go with, because how can you know what makes you lucid as a beginner when you never have had a such an experience?
Philosophers once asked and was puzzled by the question of what kept objects in motion. By what mechanism for example, does a cannon-ball remain in flight once it has been fired? Galileo's revolutionary answer was to say that this was the wrong question.
We should assume that objects will continue to travel at a constant motion and direction until acted on by another force.
What's needs to explain is not why things keeps going, but why they change direction and why they stop.
Lucidity will come naturally and should not be your primary focus. Instead you should focus on the smaller goals that will bring you lucidity.
One of these things are Dream Recall. Before you can score a soccer goal you need to learn how to kick, when the kick is mastered the goal will come more easily and naturally.
Dream recall is that kick. And it's easy to practise, just wake up and see what you can remember, if you don't remember anything write down what you did last night that might have stopped your recall, like late bedtimes, amount of stress as you went to sleep, pillow, temperature of the room, anything that you consider relevant.
Then when you remember a bunch of dreams or atleast more than usual, you can now look at what you had changed, but then the night when you don't remember your dreams again, here is your oppurunity to learn something. Now you can compare that attempt to the successful night and observe what caused the lack of recall.
And at the same time you will know what you need to do in order to remember your dreams.
When they realized that gravity was the force that pulled objects back to the ground, they had something to work from.
This is the kind of mindset that I use when I try a new method or tool for lucid dreaming.
Instead of getting frustrated of the fact that something didn't worked, I learn what my opposite force was and keep that in mind for my future attempts.
For example, if I go to bed very late and I don't get good recall, I don't get discouraged, because I know that a later bedtime means less REM which means less vivid dreams to remember. Of course I can use this to my advantage and adjust my bedtime to a regular and normal time and increase my chances of good dream recall.
But my point of this post is that it's very important to learn from what seems to be a failure, but actually just is an oppurtunity of learning if you allow it to.
And of course always ask if you need help, but trust your own experience first and foremost because that is your true knowledge.
Sweet dreams!
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