You're welcome.
I wanted to get it all over with as soon as possible too. I've seen plenty of ex-smokers and some ex-dippers say they just stopped one day and never looked back. I wanted to be like that. One time I was forced to stop for a little longer than 6 weeks. The nicotine was out of my system. I kept thinking to myself that I should keep it that way. Then, when the first opportunity arose, I became obsessed until I bought a can so I could get a quick pinch to alleviate the obsession. That quick pinch lasted for 22 years.
When I did toss the can again in 2010, I still wanted to get it all over with ASAP. After about a year of stopping, the obsession returned where I convinced myself that I "needed" nic to get through a rough period in my life. As it turned out, the nic didn't do a damn thing to make anything better. It took an additional 6 years to figure out that dip was just a big lie that I believed. On March 8, 2017, I decided that I was going let the quitting process take the rest of my life. I deal with it by making a promise one day at a time, but I am never going back and I am going to do anything I can to make sure that happens. Now I am not woefully resigned to the process, but I look forward to it. I am using the quitting process to become a better person in all aspects of my life, and there is a lot of room for improvement.