Hi NoButts! Love your username lol. I can only share my experience with regards to quitting - I was not often very confident when I started on a quit. I failed again and again but kept trying and kept track of what was working for me/not working. It finally came together for me this time, but this was a quit I didn't feel confident going into, either. I knew my track record and I knew my feelings of ambiguity ran deep. One thing I had to do was get rid of all of my smoking stuff. This quit is the first one I started by even getting rid of my lighters and matches, and for me I don't think it's a coincidence that this is the quit that stuck. I found that keeping ANY smoking supplies around meant I had a little space reserved in my brain for permission, or plans, to fail. Now that was my experience - but if you read around here (which I highly recommend, as it can rev you up for quitting and also provide a LOT of shared experience and education about the process) you'll find that other quitters did the opposite and found strength by keeping smoking stuff around but choosing to say no to it. Only you can know what is best for you, and it unfortunately might be through trial and error. The important thing is to keep going.