Hey, LDS. I've been thinking about what you wrote in your journal. Here are a few of my thoughts:
Dreams are a completely safe and non-threatening environment in which to explore your sexuality (or your mind to explore your sexuality regardless of your input). Just because you have a few dreams from the perspective of a character with a different gender or sexual orientation than you do, does not mean you have to rewrite your entire identity. I think of dreams as a form of storytelling. Just because you identify with a character in a book does not mean you immediately take on all of his or her characteristics.
Also, don't forget that women are conditioned to empathize with fictional male characters. If I can use the Harry Potter books as an example, a male main character is used to introduce the young reader to a wonderful world of magic. This is typical; the idea is that female audiences can identify with male characters, but male audiences can't identify with female characters. Basically, all of our mainstream entertainment is written in a way that's supposed to appeal to the male audience, and women learn to identify with this type of storytelling. In feminist terms, men are considered to be the default; women are considered "other".
It stands out to me that you dreamed that you were a straight, male character - the default, in other words. You put yourself in the shoes of a character that you've been encouraged to identify with by mainstream media: books, television, movies, and so on. Nothing about that stands out to me as strange.
As for this being a lucid dream: like Malfunction pointed out, there are different levels of lucidity. You might know that you're in a dream, but not every element of the dream might pop out to you as strange. For example, I've had a few lucid dreams where I look around and think that my surroundings look exactly like such-and-such a place. I might even marvel at how exact everything is. Then I wake up and wonder what the hell I was thinking; that place doesn't look anything like the dream did. You might be lucid, but you're still unconscious. Things that are out of place might still seem entirely normal in a lucid.
has anyone ever had a different sexuality in a dream?!
I'm pan/bisexual, so not so much. If I ever start running around in a lucid, screaming about how I'm actually 100% straight/gay, I'll let you know.
I have nothing against gay people
Just a note: if you have to use this as a disclaimer, you should make sure you think extra hard about what you're saying to warrant it. That said, nothing you've said is offensive, and I don't think you're homophobic. Just think about it.
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